Hahn Ulrike, Warren Paul A
School of Psychology, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK.
Psychol Rev. 2009 Apr;116(2):454-61. doi: 10.1037/a0015241.
A long tradition of psychological research has lamented the systematic errors and biases in people's perception of the characteristics of sequences generated by a random mechanism such as a coin toss. It is proposed that once the likely nature of people's actual experience of such processes is taken into account, these "errors" and "biases" actually emerge as apt reflections of the probabilistic characteristics of sequences of random events. Specifically, seeming biases reflect the subjective experience of a finite data stream for an agent with a limited short-term memory capacity. Consequently, these biases seem testimony not to the limitations of people's intuitive statistics but rather to the extent to which the human cognitive system is finely attuned to the statistics of the environment.
长期以来,心理学研究一直哀叹人们在认知诸如抛硬币等随机机制产生的序列特征时存在系统性错误和偏差。有人提出,一旦考虑到人们实际经历此类过程的可能性质,这些“错误”和“偏差”实际上就会成为随机事件序列概率特征的恰当反映。具体而言,看似的偏差反映了一个短期记忆容量有限的主体对有限数据流的主观体验。因此,这些偏差似乎证明的不是人们直观统计能力的局限性,而是人类认知系统与环境统计数据的契合程度。