Think or blink --- is the recognition heuristic an ``intuitive'' strategy?

Several approaches to judgment and decision making emphasize the effort-reducing properties of heuristics. One prominent example for effort-reduction is the recognition heuristic (RH) which proposes that judgments are made by relying on one single cue (recognition), ignoring other information. Our r...

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Main Authors: Benjamin E. Hilbig, Sabine G. Scholl, Ruediger F. Pohl
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society for Judgment and Decision Making 2010-07-01
Series:Judgment and Decision Making
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.sjdm.org/10/rh6/rh6.pdf
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spelling doaj-e6c056cea96f45a8abeb446b092c87642021-05-02T02:08:37ZengSociety for Judgment and Decision MakingJudgment and Decision Making1930-29752010-07-0154300309Think or blink --- is the recognition heuristic an ``intuitive'' strategy?Benjamin E. HilbigSabine G. SchollRuediger F. PohlSeveral approaches to judgment and decision making emphasize the effort-reducing properties of heuristics. One prominent example for effort-reduction is the recognition heuristic (RH) which proposes that judgments are made by relying on one single cue (recognition), ignoring other information. Our research aims to shed light on the conditions under which the RH is more useful and thus relied on more often. We propose that intuitive thinking is fast, automatic, and effortless whereas deliberative thinking is slower, stepwise, and more effortful. Because effort-reduction is thus much more important when processing information deliberately, we hypothesize that the RH should be more often relied on in such situations. In two city-size-experiments, we instructed participants to think either intuitively or deliberatively and assessed use of the RH through a formal measurement model. Results revealed that, in both experiments, use of the RH was more likely when judgments were to be made deliberatively, rather than intuitively. As such, we conclude that the potential application of heuristics is not necessarily a consequence of ``intuitive'' processing. Rather, their effort-reducing features are probably most beneficial when thinking more deliberatively. http://journal.sjdm.org/10/rh6/rh6.pdfeffort-reductionintuitiondeliberationheuristicsrecognition heuristiccomparative judgmentsmultinomial processingtree model.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Benjamin E. Hilbig
Sabine G. Scholl
Ruediger F. Pohl
spellingShingle Benjamin E. Hilbig
Sabine G. Scholl
Ruediger F. Pohl
Think or blink --- is the recognition heuristic an ``intuitive'' strategy?
Judgment and Decision Making
effort-reduction
intuition
deliberation
heuristics
recognition heuristic
comparative judgments
multinomial processingtree model.
author_facet Benjamin E. Hilbig
Sabine G. Scholl
Ruediger F. Pohl
author_sort Benjamin E. Hilbig
title Think or blink --- is the recognition heuristic an ``intuitive'' strategy?
title_short Think or blink --- is the recognition heuristic an ``intuitive'' strategy?
title_full Think or blink --- is the recognition heuristic an ``intuitive'' strategy?
title_fullStr Think or blink --- is the recognition heuristic an ``intuitive'' strategy?
title_full_unstemmed Think or blink --- is the recognition heuristic an ``intuitive'' strategy?
title_sort think or blink --- is the recognition heuristic an ``intuitive'' strategy?
publisher Society for Judgment and Decision Making
series Judgment and Decision Making
issn 1930-2975
publishDate 2010-07-01
description Several approaches to judgment and decision making emphasize the effort-reducing properties of heuristics. One prominent example for effort-reduction is the recognition heuristic (RH) which proposes that judgments are made by relying on one single cue (recognition), ignoring other information. Our research aims to shed light on the conditions under which the RH is more useful and thus relied on more often. We propose that intuitive thinking is fast, automatic, and effortless whereas deliberative thinking is slower, stepwise, and more effortful. Because effort-reduction is thus much more important when processing information deliberately, we hypothesize that the RH should be more often relied on in such situations. In two city-size-experiments, we instructed participants to think either intuitively or deliberatively and assessed use of the RH through a formal measurement model. Results revealed that, in both experiments, use of the RH was more likely when judgments were to be made deliberatively, rather than intuitively. As such, we conclude that the potential application of heuristics is not necessarily a consequence of ``intuitive'' processing. Rather, their effort-reducing features are probably most beneficial when thinking more deliberatively.
topic effort-reduction
intuition
deliberation
heuristics
recognition heuristic
comparative judgments
multinomial processingtree model.
url http://journal.sjdm.org/10/rh6/rh6.pdf
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