The hot hand phenomenon as a cognitive adaptation to clumped resources (original) (raw)

Expectations of clumpy resources influence predictions of sequential events

Andreas Wilke

Evolution and Human Behavior, 2011

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Hot-hand bias in rhesus monkeys

Tommy Blanchard, Benjamin Hayden, Andreas Wilke

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Learning and Cognition, 2014

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Extending the two faces of subjective randomness: From the gambler's and hot-hand fallacies toward a hierarchy of binary sequence perception

Lior Savranevski

Memory & cognition, 2015

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The hot hand fallacy and the gambler’s fallacy: Two faces of subjective randomness?

Ilan Fischer

Memory & Cognition, 2004

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“heads or tails?”—a reachability bias in binary choice

Maya Bar-hillel

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2014

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Perceptions of randomness: Why three heads are better than four

Ulrike Hahn

Psychological Review, 2009

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Randomization in individual choice behavior

David Budescu

Psychological Review, 1997

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The perception of probability

Monika Krishan

Psychological Review, 2014

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Long-tailed macaques extract statistical information from repeated types of events to make rational decisions under uncertainty

Marie Padberg

Scientific Reports, 2019

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Random Foraging and Perceived Randomness

Marshall Abrams

Philosophy of Science, 2023

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Small samples and evolution: did the law of small numbers arise as an adaptation to environmental challenges

daniel J froimovitch

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Individual differences in the perception of probability

Luminita Stevens

PLOS Computational Biology, 2021

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Adaptive Probability Theory: Human Biases as an Adaptation

André Martins

2005

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Perception of randomness and predicting uncertain events

Przemysław Sawicki, Raymond Dacey

Thinking & Reasoning, 2008

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Psychological conceptions of randomness

George Wright

Journal of Behavioral Decision Making, 1989

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Why are people bad at detecting randomness? A statistical argument

Joseph Jay Williams

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory & Cognition.

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Is the "hot-hands" phenomenon a misperception of random events?

hiroto miyoshi

Japanese Psychological Research, 2000

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Brase, G.L., Cosmides, L. & Tooby, J. (1998). Individuation, counting, and statistical inference: The roles of frequency and whole object representations in judgment under uncertainty. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 127, 3-21.

Gary Brase

Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 1998

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Perception and identification of random events

Ulrike Hahn

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2014

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Regular and random judgements are not two sides of the same coin: Both representativeness and encoding play a role in randomness perception

Giorgio Gronchi

Psychonomic Bulletin & Review

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The perception of randomness

Maya Bar-hillel

Advances in Applied Mathematics, 1991

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Biases in human behavior

Massimo Egidi

2002

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Assessing the “bias” in human randomness perception

Wael El-deredy, G. Farmer

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Outcome probability modulates anticipatory behavior to signals that are equally reliable

Miguel Vadillo

Adaptive Behavior, 2014

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Do Causal Beliefs Influence the Hot-Hand and the Gambler's Fallacy?

Giorgio Gronchi

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Seeing the Forest When Entry is Unlikely: Probability and the Mental Representation of Events

Nira Liberman

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2000

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Randomness in retrospect: Exploring the interactions between memory and randomness cognition

Christopher Olivola

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Toward an Ecological Theory of Rationality: Debunking the Hot Hand “Illusion”

John Flach

Ecological Psychology, 2017

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The evolution of cognitive bias

Greg Bryant

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Adaptable history biases in human perceptual decisions

Laura Silva

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2016

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A belief in trend reversal requires access to cognitive resources

Piotr Zielonka

Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 2016

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The Effect of Sample Size and Cognitive Strategy on Probability Estimation Bias

Hanan Shteingart, Yonatan Loewenstein

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