Base rates do not constrain nonprobability judgments

Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19 (1):40-41 (1996)
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Abstract

Base rates have no necessary relation to judgments that are not themselves probabilities. There is no logical imperative, for instance, that behavioral base rates must affect causal attributions or that base rate information should affect judgments of legal liability. Decision theorists should be cautious in arguing that base rates place normative constraints on judgments of anything other than posterior probabilities.

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