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. 2020 Mar:196:104153.
doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2019.104153. Epub 2019 Dec 12.

Neurocognitive processes underlying heuristic and normative probability judgments

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Neurocognitive processes underlying heuristic and normative probability judgments

Linus Andersson et al. Cognition. 2020 Mar.

Abstract

Judging two events in combination (A&B) as more probable than one of the events (A) is known as a conjunction fallacy. According to dual-process explanations of human judgment and decision making, the fallacy is due to the application of a heuristic, associative cognitive process. Avoiding the fallacy has been suggested to require the recruitment of a separate process that can apply normative rules. We investigated these assumptions using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during conjunction tasks. Judgments, whether correct or not, engaged a network of brain regions identical to that engaged during similarity judgments. Avoidance of the conjunction fallacy additionally, and uniquely, involved a fronto-parietal network previously linked to supervisory, analytic control processes. The results lend credibility to the idea that incorrect probability judgments are the result of a representativeness heuristic that requires additional neurocognitive resources to avoid.

Keywords: Decision making; Dual-process; Dual-system; Representativeness; fMRI.

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