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The effects and side-effects of statistics education: Psychology students’ (mis-)conceptions of probability
Authors:Kinga Morsanyi  Caterina Primi  Francesca Chiesi  Simon Handley
Institution:1. School of Psychology, University of Plymouth, Drake Circus, Plymouth, Devon, PL4 8AA, UK;2. University of Florence, Department of Psychology, Via di San Salvi, 12-50135 Firenze, Italy
Abstract:In three studies we looked at two typical misconceptions of probability: the representativeness heuristic, and the equiprobability bias. The literature on statistics education predicts that some typical errors and biases (e.g., the equiprobability bias) increase with education, whereas others decrease. This is in contrast with reasoning theorists’ prediction who propose that education reduces misconceptions in general. They also predict that students with higher cognitive ability and higher need for cognition are less susceptible to biases. In Experiments 1 and 2 we found that the equiprobability bias increased with statistics education, and it was negatively correlated with students’ cognitive abilities. The representativeness heuristic was mostly unaffected by education, and it was also unrelated to cognitive abilities. In Experiment 3 we demonstrated through an instruction manipulation (by asking participants to think logically vs. rely on their intuitions) that the reason for these differences was that these biases originated in different cognitive processes.
Keywords:Dual-process theories  Equiprobability bias  Heuristics and biases  Individual differences  Instruction manipulation  Probabilistic reasoning  Representativeness heuristic  Statistics education
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