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- Q17157229 subject Q7210409.
- Q17157229 abstract "The Range-Frequency Compromise in Judgment is an influential theory in cognitive psychology developed by Allen Parducci in the mid-1960s. Range-frequency is descriptive of how judgments reflect a compromise between a range principle that assigns each category to an equal subrange of contextual stimuli and a frequency principle that assigns each of the categories to the same number of contextual stimuli. Each judgment is a weighted average of what it would have been judged were it to follow just the range or just the frequency principle. A crucial deduction from the theory is that the mean of all judgments is proportionate to the skew of the frequency distribution of the context under which the judgment is made, assuming that the context is an unbiased representation of the stimuli that are judged.".
- Q17157229 thumbnail Allen_Parducci_UCLA.JPG?width=300.
- Q17157229 wikiPageWikiLink Q1378320.
- Q17157229 wikiPageWikiLink Q168756.
- Q17157229 wikiPageWikiLink Q174710.
- Q17157229 wikiPageWikiLink Q230492.
- Q17157229 wikiPageWikiLink Q7210409.
- Q17157229 wikiPageWikiLink Q766145.
- Q17157229 comment "The Range-Frequency Compromise in Judgment is an influential theory in cognitive psychology developed by Allen Parducci in the mid-1960s. Range-frequency is descriptive of how judgments reflect a compromise between a range principle that assigns each category to an equal subrange of contextual stimuli and a frequency principle that assigns each of the categories to the same number of contextual stimuli.".
- Q17157229 label "Range-Frequency Theory".
- Q17157229 depiction Allen_Parducci_UCLA.JPG.