Structuring Knowledge Retrieval: An Analysis of Decomposed Quantitative Judgments

21 Pages Posted: 3 Jun 2011

See all articles by Donald G. MacGregor

Donald G. MacGregor

MacGregor-Bates, Inc.

Sarah Lichtenstein

Decision Research

Paul Slovic

Decision Research; University of Oregon - Department of Psychology

Date Written: January 1, 1987

Abstract

Subjects were asked to estimate the answers to 16 questions concerning uncertain quantities like, "How many people are employed by hospitals in the U.S.?" under five different aiding conditions. The most-aided group (Full Algorithm) was given a complete algorithm and asked to make estimates for the parts of the algorithm and to combine the parts as indicated to arrive at an estimate of the desired quantity. The second group (Partial Algorithm) was given the same algorithm without indications of how to combine the parts. After making estimates of the parts, these subjects then estimated the desired quantity. The third group (List & Estimate) was asked to list components or factors they thought were relevant, make an estimate of each item on their list, and then estimate the desired quantity. The fourth group (List) was asked to make such a list, but they were not asked to make estimates of each item before making an estimate of the desired quantity. The fifth group received no aid. The results generally showed improved performance in terms of both accuracy and consistency across subjects with increasing structure of the aid. Generalization of these results to practical estimation situations is possible but limited by the need, in real situations, for the estimator to develop the algorithm, a task that was done here by the experimenters.

Suggested Citation

MacGregor, Donald G. and Lichtenstein, Sarah and Slovic, Paul, Structuring Knowledge Retrieval: An Analysis of Decomposed Quantitative Judgments (January 1, 1987). Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, Vol. 42, pp. 303-323, 1988, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1852863

Donald G. MacGregor (Contact Author)

MacGregor-Bates, Inc. ( email )

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Sarah Lichtenstein

Decision Research ( email )

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Paul Slovic

Decision Research ( email )

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Eugene, OR 97401
United States
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541-485-2403 (Fax)

HOME PAGE: http://www.decisionresearch.org

University of Oregon - Department of Psychology ( email )

Eugene, OR 97403
United States
541-485-2400 (Phone)

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