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Journal ArticleDOI

Norm theory: Comparing reality to its alternatives

Daniel Kahneman, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1986 - 
- Vol. 93, Iss: 2, pp 136-153
TLDR
In this article, a theory of norms and normality is presented and applied to some phenomena of emotional responses, social judgment, and conversations about causes, such as emotional response to events that have abnormal causes, the generation of predictions and inferences from observations of behavior and the role of norms in causal questions and answers.
Abstract
A theory of norms and normality is presented and applied to some phenomena of emotional responses, social judgment, and conversations about causes. Norms are assumed to be constructed ad hoc by recruiting specific representations. Category norms are derived by recruiting exemplars. Specific objects or events generate their own norms by retrieval of similar experiences stored in memory or by construction of counterfactual alternatives. The normality of a stimulus is evaluated by comparing it to the norms that it evokes after the fact, rather than to precomputed expectations. Norm theory is applied in analyses of the enhanced emotional response to events that have abnormal causes, of the generation of predictions and inferences from observations of behavior, and of the role of norms in causal questions and answers. This article is concerned with category norms that represent knowledge of concepts and with stimulus norms that govern comparative judgments and designate experiences as surprising. In the tradition of adaptation level theory (Appley, 1971; Helson, 1964), the concept of norm is applied to events that range in complexity from single visual displays to social interactions. We first propose a model of an activation process that produces norms, then explore the role of norms in social cognition. The central idea of the present treatment is that norms are computed after the event rather than in advance. We sketch a supplement to the generally accepted idea that events in the stream of experience are interpreted and evaluated by consulting precomputed schemas and frames of reference. The view developed here is that each stimulus selectively recruits its own alternatives (Garner, 1962, 1970) and is interpreted in a rich context of remembered and constructed representations of what it could have been, might have been, or should have been. Thus, each event brings its own frame of reference into being. We also explore the idea that knowledge of categories (e.g., "encounters with Jim") can be derived on-line by selectively evoking stored representations of discrete episodes and exemplars. The present model assumes that a number of representations can be recruited in parallel, by either a stimulus event or an

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Citations
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A perspective on judgment and choice: Mapping bounded rationality.

TL;DR: Determinants and consequences of accessibility help explain the central results of prospect theory, framing effects, the heuristic process of attribute substitution, and the characteristic biases that result from the substitution of nonextensional for extensional attributes.
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Core Affect and the Psychological Construction of Emotion

TL;DR: At the heart of emotion, mood, and any other emotionally charged event are states experienced as simply feeling good or bad, energized or enervated, which influence reflexes, perception, cognition, and behavior.
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Beyond pleasure and pain.

TL;DR: In this paper, a regulatory focus is used to distinguish self-regulation with a promotion focus (accomplishments and aspirations) from self-regulatory with a prevention focus (safety and responsibilities).
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Dimensions of Consumer Expertise

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of empirical results from the psychological literature in a way that provides a useful foundation for research on consumer knowledge is provided by two fundamental distinctions: consumer expertise is distinguished from product-related experience and five distinct aspects, or dimensions, of expertise are identified.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Cultural differences in viewing uncertainty and assessing probabilities

TL;DR: This paper examined possible cultural influences on probabilistic thinking by observing subjects in probability assessment experiments, and found that subjects' comprehension of the tasks was associated with subjects' cultural backgrounds, and that there is some substance to these informal observations.
Journal ArticleDOI

The conjunction fallacy

TL;DR: It is argued that in some contexts, anAlternative that contains the conjunction of two events can be more probable than an alternative that contains only one of the conjunction's constituent events.
Journal ArticleDOI

Overestimation of subjective probabilities

TL;DR: This article found that the direct p estimates are relatively independent of frequency judgments, the chief determinant being the properties of the particular sample to be evaluated, irrespective of the number and probabilities of other possible samples.
Journal ArticleDOI

Technical Uncertainty in Quantitative Policy Analysis — A Sulfur Air Pollution Example

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the extent to which the conclusions reached in such a study depend on which expert one talks to, and show that estimates of sulfur mass balance as a function of plume flight time vary little across the range of opinions of leading atmospheric scientists while estimates of possible health impacts are shown to vary widely across different experts in air pollution health effects.