Abstract
Brase (2002, Journal
of Behavioral Decision Making)
Research
suggesting both a superiority of frequencies over single-event probabilities
and of smaller reference classes over very large reference classes have
utilized tasks that vary in computational complexity. The present research
sought to simply and directly evaluate if--apart from simplifying statistical
inference tasks--frequencies and small reference classes are clearer than other
formats. 320 undergraduates participated in this research. After eliminating
possible computational confounds, simple frequencies (based on small reference
classes, e.g. 1/3) and to some extent relative frequencies (percentages, e.g.
33%) were perceived as clearer than absolute frequencies (based on very large
reference classes, e.g. 90 million Americans) and single-event probabilities
(e.g. 0.33). Concurrently, these different formats were evaluated in terms of
their relative influence. Absolute frequencies were relatively more persuasive
for smaller magnitudes (e.g. 2.7 million) but less persuasive for larger
magnitudes (e.g. 267 million), as compared to analogous presentations.
Single-event probabilities were judged to minimize the significance of
information.