Search research articles
Contact Us
Filters
Showing results (1-10 of 27) with videos related to
Page
of 3
Sort By:
Psychological Review
|
December 29, 2015
Noisy probability judgment, the conjunction fallacy, and rationality: Comment on Costello and Watts (2014)
Vincenzo Crupi, Katya Tentori
Internal and Emergency Medicine
|
April 23, 2017
Understanding and improving decisions in clinical medicine (I): Reasoning, heuristics, and error
Vincenzo Crupi, Fabrizio Elia
Frontiers in Psychology
|
March 25, 2014
From is to ought, and back: how normative concerns foster progress in reasoning research
Vincenzo Crupi, Vittorio Girotto
Cognition
|
November 15, 2011
On the conjunction fallacy and the meaning of and, yet again: a reply to Hertwig, Benz, and Krauss (2008)
Katya Tentori, Vincenzo Crupi
The Behavioral and Brain Sciences
|
May 16, 2013
Why quantum probability does not explain the conjunction fallacy
Katya Tentori, Vincenzo Crupi
Internal and Emergency Medicine
|
May 11, 2020
Understanding and improving decisions in clinical medicine (V): Jekyll and Hyde, the two faces of clinical reasoning
Fabrizio Elia, Fabrizio Vallelonga, Vincenzo Crupi
Psychological Review
|
October 21, 2009
Pseudodiagnosticity revisited
Vincenzo Crupi, Katya Tentori, Luigi Lombardi
Memory & Cognition
|
October 6, 2010
Broadening the study of inductive reasoning: confirmation judgments with uncertain evidence
Tommaso Mastropasqua, Vincenzo Crupi, Katya Tentori
Internal and Emergency Medicine
|
October 25, 2017
Understanding and improving decisions in clinical medicine (III): towards cognitively informed clinical thinking
Vincenzo Crupi, Fabrizio Elia, Franco Aprà
Journal of Experimental Psychology. General
|
July 25, 2012
On the determinants of the conjunction fallacy: probability versus inductive confirmation
Katya Tentori, Vincenzo Crupi, Selena Russo
Page
of 3
Search research articles
Search
Showing results (1-10 of 27) with videos related to
Sort By:
Page
of 3
Psychological Review
|
December 29, 2015
Noisy probability judgment, the conjunction fallacy, and rationality: Comment on Costello and Watts (2014)
Vincenzo Crupi, Katya Tentori
Internal and Emergency Medicine
|
April 23, 2017
Understanding and improving decisions in clinical medicine (I): Reasoning, heuristics, and error
Vincenzo Crupi, Fabrizio Elia
Frontiers in Psychology
|
March 25, 2014
From is to ought, and back: how normative concerns foster progress in reasoning research
Vincenzo Crupi, Vittorio Girotto
Cognition
|
November 15, 2011
On the conjunction fallacy and the meaning of and, yet again: a reply to Hertwig, Benz, and Krauss (2008)
Katya Tentori, Vincenzo Crupi
The Behavioral and Brain Sciences
|
May 16, 2013
Why quantum probability does not explain the conjunction fallacy
Katya Tentori, Vincenzo Crupi
Internal and Emergency Medicine
|
May 11, 2020
Understanding and improving decisions in clinical medicine (V): Jekyll and Hyde, the two faces of clinical reasoning
Fabrizio Elia, Fabrizio Vallelonga, Vincenzo Crupi
Psychological Review
|
October 21, 2009
Pseudodiagnosticity revisited
Vincenzo Crupi, Katya Tentori, Luigi Lombardi
Memory & Cognition
|
October 6, 2010
Broadening the study of inductive reasoning: confirmation judgments with uncertain evidence
Tommaso Mastropasqua, Vincenzo Crupi, Katya Tentori
Internal and Emergency Medicine
|
October 25, 2017
Understanding and improving decisions in clinical medicine (III): towards cognitively informed clinical thinking
Vincenzo Crupi, Fabrizio Elia, Franco Aprà
Journal of Experimental Psychology. General
|
July 25, 2012
On the determinants of the conjunction fallacy: probability versus inductive confirmation
Katya Tentori, Vincenzo Crupi, Selena Russo
Page
of 3