2020
DOI: 10.3758/s13423-020-01805-9
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Precise/not precise (PNP): A Brunswikian model that uses judgment error distributions to identify cognitive processes

Abstract: In 1956, Brunswik proposed a definition of what he called intuitive and analytic cognitive processes, not in terms of verbally specified properties, but operationally based on the observable error distributions. In the decades since, the diagnostic value of error distributions has generally been overlooked, arguably because of a long tradition to consider the error as exogenous (and irrelevant) to the process. Based on Brunswik’s ideas, we develop the precise/not precise (PNP) model, using a mixture distributi… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
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