articleCurrent Directions in Psychological ScienceMar 29, 2004Closed access

How People Make Decisions That Involve Risk

University of Arizona

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Many health and safety problems, including war and terrorism, are by-products of how people reason about risk. I describe a new approach to reasoning about risk that implements a modern dual-process model of memory called fuzzy-trace theory. This approach posits encoding of both verbatim and gist representations, with reliance on the latter whenever possible; dependence of reasoning on retrieval cues that access stored values and principles; and vulnerability of reasoning to processing interference from overlapping classes of events, which causes denominator neglect in risk or probability judgments. These simple principles explain classic and new findings, for example, the finding that people overestimate…

Citation impact

636
total citations
FWCI
9.42
Percentile
100%
References
19
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Psychology
  • Intuition
  • Rationality
  • Cognitive psychology
  • Analytic reasoning
  • Dual process theory (moral psychology)
  • Categorization
  • TRACE (psycholinguistics)
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Peace, Justice and strong institutions
No related works found for this paper.