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Nicholas Goodman

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  • All publications (6)
  •  23
    The anchoring bias reflects rational use of cognitive resources
    with F. Lieder, T. L. Griffiths, and Quentin Q. J.
    © 2017 Psychonomic Society, Inc.Cognitive biases, such as the anchoring bias, pose a serious challenge to rational accounts of human cognition. We investigate whether rational theories can meet this challenge by taking into account the mind’s bounded cognitive resources. We asked what reasoning under uncertainty would look like if people made rational use of their finite time and limited cognitive resources. To answer this question, we applied a mathematical theory of bounded rationality to the …Read more
    © 2017 Psychonomic Society, Inc.Cognitive biases, such as the anchoring bias, pose a serious challenge to rational accounts of human cognition. We investigate whether rational theories can meet this challenge by taking into account the mind’s bounded cognitive resources. We asked what reasoning under uncertainty would look like if people made rational use of their finite time and limited cognitive resources. To answer this question, we applied a mathematical theory of bounded rationality to the problem of numerical estimation. Our analysis led to a rational process model that can be interpreted in terms of anchoring-and-adjustment. This model provided a unifying explanation for ten anchoring phenomena including the differential effect of accuracy motivation on the bias towards provided versus self-generated anchors. Our results illustrate the potential of resource-rational analysis to provide formal theories that can unify a wide range of empirical results and reconcile the impressive capacities of the human mind with its apparently irrational cognitive biases.
  •  125
    Lifestyles and allocation of health care resources
    Journal of Medical Ethics 20 (4): 271-271. 1994.
    Nelson GoodmanMedical Resource Allocation
  •  117
    Resource allocation: idealism, realism, pragmatism, openness
    Journal of Medical Ethics 17 (4): 179-180. 1991.
    Lewis and Charny have come under siege for suggesting remote questioning to decide appropriate medical care. While the criticisms are theoretically valid, the idea is so important practically that Lewis and Charny should be supported and their approach investigated as a way of making medical treatment at least more open and possibly more fair
    Nelson GoodmanMedical Resource AllocationHealth Care Justice
  •  103
    Not empirical, but observational or experimental
    Journal of Medical Ethics 25 (6): 549-549. 1999.
    Biomedical EthicsNelson Goodman
  •  94
    Obituary: John R. Myhill (1923–1987)
    with R. E. Vesley
    History and Philosophy of Logic 8 (2): 243-244. 1987.
    No abstract
    Logic and Philosophy of LogicNelson GoodmanLogic and Philosophy of Logic, Miscellaneous
  •  150
    Annual meeting of the Association for Symbolic Logic, New York City, December 1987
    with Harold T. Hodes, Carl G. Jockusch, and Kenneth McAloon
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 53 (4): 1287-1299. 1988.
    Logic and Philosophy of LogicLogic and Philosophy of Logic, MiscNelson Goodman
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