What number is 'fifty-fifty'? Redistributing excess 50% responses in risk perception studies

Autor: Bruine de Bruin, W.J.A., Fischbeck, P.S., Stiber, N.A., Fischhoff, B.
Přispěvatelé: Human Technology Interaction
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2002
Zdroj: Risk Analysis, 22(4), 725-735. Wiley-Blackwell
ISSN: 0272-4332
Popis: an elevated frequency (or blip) at 50 in their response distributions. Our previous research(1–3) suggests that this is caused by intrusion of the phrase "fifty-fifty," which represents epistemic uncertainty, rather than a true numeric probability of 50%. Such inappropriate responses pose a problem for decision analysts and others relying on probabilistic judgments. Using an explicit numeric probability scale (ranging from 0–100%) reduces thinking about uncertain events in verbal terms like "fifty-fifty," and, with it, exaggerated use of the 50 response.(1,2) Here, we present two procedures for adjusting response distributions for data already collected with open-ended response modes and hence vulnerable to an exaggerated presence of 50%. Each procedure infers the prevalence of 50s had a numeric probability scale been used, then redistributes the excess. The two procedures are validated on some of our own existing data and then applied to judgments elicited from experts in groundwater pollution and bioremediation.
Databáze: OpenAIRE