Strategic Thinking in a Hospital Setting

  • Hamdan A
ISSN: 1076898X
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Abstract

Participants viewed a simulated crime and attempted an identification from an 8-person target-present or target-absent lineup. The authors examined identification confidence-accuracy relations, contrasting a control condition (n = 310) with 2 manipulations designed to improve confidence scaling. Before indicating confidence, participants reflected on encoding and identification test conditions (n = 316) or suggested hypotheses about why their identification decision might have been wrong (n = 318). Confidence-accuracy correlations were weak and did not differ across conditions. However, for positive identifications, confidence and accuracy were well calibrated in the experimental conditions, although not in the control condition; similar patterns were observed for lineup rejections. Explanations for calibration differences in terms of discrimination difficulty, (mis)match between encoding and test stimuli, and the availability of confidence cues were advanced.

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Hamdan, A. L. (2017). Strategic Thinking in a Hospital Setting (pp. 9–15). American University of Beirut. Retrieved from http://link.springer.com/10.1007/978-3-319-53597-5

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