| Literature DB >> 28725239 |
Roni Setton1, Evan Wilhelms1, Becky Weldon1, Christina Chick1, Valerie Reyna1.
Abstract
We present the basic tenets of fuzzy trace theory, a comprehensive theory of memory, judgment, and decision making that is grounded in research on how information is stored as knowledge, mentally represented, retrieved from storage, and processed. In doing so, we highlight how it is distinguished from traditional models of decision making in that gist reasoning plays a central role. The theory also distinguishes advanced intuition from primitive impulsivity. It predicts that different sorts of errors occur with respect to each component of judgment and decision making: background knowledge, representation, retrieval, and processing. Classic errors in the judgment and decision making literature, such as risky-choice framing and the conjunction fallacy, are accounted for by fuzzy trace theory and new results generated by the theory contradict traditional approaches. We also describe how developmental changes in brain and behavior offer crucial insight into adult cognitive processing. Research investigating brain and behavior in developing and special populations supports fuzzy trace theory's predictions about reliance on gist processing.Entities:
Keywords: decision making; development; fuzzy trace theory; neuroscience; rationality; risk
Year: 2014 PMID: 28725239 PMCID: PMC5512727 DOI: 10.3724/SP.J.1042.2014.01837
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Xin Li Ke Xue Jin Zhan ISSN: 1671-3710