R. Murphy, THE EFFECTS OF TASK CHARACTERISTICS ON COVARIATION ASSESSMENT - THE IMPACT OF ACCOUNTABILITY AND JUDGMENT FRAME, Organizational behavior and human decision processes, 60(1), 1994, pp. 139-155
The impact of personal accountability and judgment frame on strategies
for assessing covariation between two binary variables was examined i
n two experiments. Using a task designed to discriminate between the u
se of four different strategies varying in degree of sophistication it
was found that subjects accountable to an audience with unknown views
displayed use of more complex strategies than subjects who were not a
ccountable. In addition, contrary to a recent attribution model (Cheng
& Novick, 1992), subjects were less likely to use the conditional pro
bability rule when the judgement question was framed in terms of causa
lity rather than covariation, and covariation judgments did not always
parallel causality judgments. (C) 1994 Academic Press, Inc.