The role of actively open-minded thinking in information acquisition, accuracy, and calibration

Errors in estimating and forecasting often result from the failure to collect and consider enough relevant information. We examine whether attributes associated with persistence in information acquisition can predict performance in an estimation task. We focus on actively open-minded thinking (AOT),...

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Main Authors: Uriel Haran, Ilana Ritov, Barbara A. Mellers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society for Judgment and Decision Making 2013-05-01
Series:Judgment and Decision Making
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.sjdm.org/13/13124a/jdm13124a.pdf
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spelling doaj-33f5f552218f4881870f82479e1924ee2021-05-02T01:12:45ZengSociety for Judgment and Decision MakingJudgment and Decision Making1930-29752013-05-0183188201The role of actively open-minded thinking in information acquisition, accuracy, and calibrationUriel HaranIlana RitovBarbara A. MellersErrors in estimating and forecasting often result from the failure to collect and consider enough relevant information. We examine whether attributes associated with persistence in information acquisition can predict performance in an estimation task. We focus on actively open-minded thinking (AOT), need for cognition, grit, and the tendency to maximize or satisfice when making decisions. In three studies, participants made estimates and predictions of uncertain quantities, with varying levels of control over the amount of information they could collect before estimating. Only AOT predicted performance. This relationship was mediated by information acquisition: AOT predicted the tendency to collect information, and information acquisition predicted performance. To the extent that available information is predictive of future outcomes, actively open-minded thinkers are more likely than others to make accurate forecasts.http://journal.sjdm.org/13/13124a/jdm13124a.pdfforecastingpredictionoverconfidencecalibrationindividual differencesactively open-minded thinking.NAKeywords
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Uriel Haran
Ilana Ritov
Barbara A. Mellers
spellingShingle Uriel Haran
Ilana Ritov
Barbara A. Mellers
The role of actively open-minded thinking in information acquisition, accuracy, and calibration
Judgment and Decision Making
forecasting
prediction
overconfidence
calibration
individual differences
actively open-minded thinking.NAKeywords
author_facet Uriel Haran
Ilana Ritov
Barbara A. Mellers
author_sort Uriel Haran
title The role of actively open-minded thinking in information acquisition, accuracy, and calibration
title_short The role of actively open-minded thinking in information acquisition, accuracy, and calibration
title_full The role of actively open-minded thinking in information acquisition, accuracy, and calibration
title_fullStr The role of actively open-minded thinking in information acquisition, accuracy, and calibration
title_full_unstemmed The role of actively open-minded thinking in information acquisition, accuracy, and calibration
title_sort role of actively open-minded thinking in information acquisition, accuracy, and calibration
publisher Society for Judgment and Decision Making
series Judgment and Decision Making
issn 1930-2975
publishDate 2013-05-01
description Errors in estimating and forecasting often result from the failure to collect and consider enough relevant information. We examine whether attributes associated with persistence in information acquisition can predict performance in an estimation task. We focus on actively open-minded thinking (AOT), need for cognition, grit, and the tendency to maximize or satisfice when making decisions. In three studies, participants made estimates and predictions of uncertain quantities, with varying levels of control over the amount of information they could collect before estimating. Only AOT predicted performance. This relationship was mediated by information acquisition: AOT predicted the tendency to collect information, and information acquisition predicted performance. To the extent that available information is predictive of future outcomes, actively open-minded thinkers are more likely than others to make accurate forecasts.
topic forecasting
prediction
overconfidence
calibration
individual differences
actively open-minded thinking.NAKeywords
url http://journal.sjdm.org/13/13124a/jdm13124a.pdf
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