Cognition in the woods: biases in probability judgments by search and rescue planners

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dc.creator Hill, Kenneth Anthony
dc.date.accessioned 2018-04-17T18:48:50Z
dc.date.available 2018-04-17T18:48:50Z
dc.date.issued 2012-07
dc.identifier.issn 1930-2975
dc.identifier.uri http://library2.smu.ca/handle/01/27424
dc.description Publisher's Version/PDF
dc.description.abstract A type of emergency decision-making which has not received research attention is the police search for a lost person in a rural or wilderness area. For many such incidents, decisions concerning where to search for the lost subject are made by a planning team, each member of which assigns probabilities to the various hypotheses about where the subject might be located, including the residual hypothesis that the subject is somewhere else entirely, that is, outside of the designated search area. In the current study, 32 adult males with search planning experience were asked to assign probabilities to a fictional lost person incident. It was hypothesized, according to support theory (Tversky & Koehler, 1994), that subjects who first considered the five possible scenarios accounting for how the subject could have left the search area—i.e., unpacked the residual hypothesis—would subsequently increase their probability estimate of the global hypothesis that the missing subject was not in the designated search area, compared to those subjects who unpacked the focal hypothesis. This hypothesis was confirmed. We also found considerable evidence for subadditivity, as most subjects estimated higher summed probabilities for the individual scenarios accounting for the focal and residual hypotheses, respectively. The potential negative consequences of such unpacking effects during a lost person incident were discussed, and possible means of mitigating such effects were described. en_CA
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dc.language.iso en en_CA
dc.publisher Society for Judgment and Decision Making en_CA
dc.relation.uri http://journal.sjdm.org/11/111014/jdm111014.pdf
dc.rights Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License
dc.subject.lcsh Decision making
dc.subject.lcsh Emergency management
dc.subject.lcsh Search and rescue operations
dc.subject.lcsh Probabilities
dc.title Cognition in the woods: biases in probability judgments by search and rescue planners en_CA
dc.type Text en_CA
dcterms.bibliographicCitation Judgment and Decision Making 7(4), 488-498. (2012) en_CA
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