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  1. Unconscious influences on decision making: A critical review.Ben R. Newell & David R. Shanks - 2014 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 37 (2):1-19.
    To what extent do we know our own minds when making decisions? Variants of this question have preoccupied researchers in a wide range of domains, from mainstream experimental psychology to cognitive neuroscience and behavioral economics. A pervasive view places a heavy explanatory burden on an intelligent cognitive unconscious, with many theories assigning causally effective roles to unconscious influences. This article presents a novel framework for evaluating these claims and reviews evidence from three major bodies of research in which unconscious factors (...)
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  • The primacy of conscious decision making.David R. Shanks & Ben R. Newell - 2014 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 37 (1):45-61.
    The target article sought to question the common belief that our decisions are often biased by unconscious influences. While many commentators offer additional support for this perspective, others question our theoretical assumptions, empirical evaluations, and methodological criteria. We rebut in particular the starting assumption that all decision making is unconscious, and that the onus should be on researchers to prove conscious influences. Further evidence is evaluated in relation to the core topics we reviewed (multiple-cue judgment, deliberation without attention, and decisions (...)
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  • Paired-Associate and Feedback-Based Weather Prediction Tasks Support Multiple Category Learning Systems.Kaiyun Li, Qiufang Fu, Xunwei Sun, Xiaoyan Zhou & Xiaolan Fu - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  • What Is the Weather Prediction Task Good for? A New Analysis of Learning Strategies Reveals How Young Adults Solve the Task.Emilie Bochud-Fragnière, Pamela Banta Lavenex & Pierre Lavenex - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    The Weather Prediction Task was originally designed to assess probabilistic classification learning. Participants were believed to gradually acquire implicit knowledge about cue–outcome association probabilities and solve the task using a multicue strategy based on the combination of all cue–outcome probabilities. However, the cognitive processes engaged in the resolution of this task have not been firmly established, and despite conflicting results, the WPT is still commonly used to assess striatal or procedural learning capacities in various populations. Here, we tested young adults (...)
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  • Dynamic overconfidence: a growth curve and cross lagged analysis of accuracy, confidence, overestimation and their relations.Edgar E. Kausel, Francisco Carrasco, Tomás Reyes, Alejandro Hirmas & Arturo Rodríguez - 2021 - Thinking and Reasoning 27 (3):417-444.
    1. Overconfidence is usually understood as being more confident than reality justifies (Harvey, 1997; Moore & Healy, 2008; Pompian, 2006), which leads individuals to overestimate their performance...
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  • Due Process in Dual Process: Model‐Recovery Simulations of Decision‐Bound Strategy Analysis in Category Learning.Charlotte E. R. Edmunds, Fraser Milton & Andy J. Wills - 2018 - Cognitive Science 42 (S3):833-860.
    Behavioral evidence for the COVIS dual‐process model of category learning has been widely reported in over a hundred publications (Ashby & Valentin, ). It is generally accepted that the validity of such evidence depends on the accurate identification of individual participants' categorization strategies, a task that usually falls to Decision Bound analysis (Maddox & Ashby, ). Here, we examine the accuracy of this analysis in a series of model‐recovery simulations. In Simulation 1, over a third of simulated participants using an (...)
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  • Cue Utilization and Cognitive Load in Novel Task Performance.Sue Brouwers, Mark W. Wiggins, William Helton, David O’Hare & Barbara Griffin - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  • Eye movements reveal memory processes during similarity- and rule-based decision making.Agnes Scholz, Bettina von Helversen & Jörg Rieskamp - 2015 - Cognition 136 (C):228-246.
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  • Is there something special with probabilities? – Insight vs. computational ability in multiple risk combination.Peter Juslin, Marcus Lindskog & Bastian Mayerhofer - 2015 - Cognition 136 (C):282-303.
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  • Development of Different Forms of Skill Learning Throughout the Lifespan.Ágnes Lukács & Ferenc Kemény - 2015 - Cognitive Science 39 (2):383-404.
    The acquisition of complex motor, cognitive, and social skills, like playing a musical instrument or mastering sports or a language, is generally associated with implicit skill learning . Although it is a general view that SL is most effective in childhood, and such skills are best acquired if learning starts early, this idea has rarely been tested by systematic empirical studies on the developmental pathways of SL from childhood to old age. In this paper, we challenge the view that childhood (...)
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  • Additive integration of information in multiple cue judgment: A division of labor hypothesis.P. Juslin, L. Karlsson & H. Olsson - 2008 - Cognition 106 (1):259-298.
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