TY - JOUR AU1 - Hogarth, Robin M. AB - Although recent research has identified systematic dysfunctional consequences of judgmental heuristics, the conditions under which such heuristics can be valid have not been specified. In particular, whereas judgment is part of a continuous, interactive process that people use to cope with the environment, most judgment research has focused on discrete incidents. This has led to underestimating the importance of feedback in ongoing processes and the unquestioned acceptance of several assumptions implicit in the discrete, normative models used to evaluate judgmental performance. In the present paper, these issues are elaborated in considering the distinctions between discrete and continuous approaches to the study of judgment and choice. It is argued that several biases identified in discrete incidents result from heuristics that are functional in the more natural continuous environment. Thus, a discrete–continuous perspective is necessary in evaluating judgmental heuristics. Questions are raised concerning both the meaning and applicability of discrete, normative theories of judgment and choice. (136 ref) TI - Beyond discrete biases: Functional and dysfunctional aspects of judgmental heuristics JF - Psychological Bulletin DO - 10.1037/0033-2909.90.2.197 DA - 1981-09-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/american-psychological-association/beyond-discrete-biases-functional-and-dysfunctional-aspects-of-DY2Lxv3OOS SP - 197 EP - 217 VL - 90 IS - 2 DP - DeepDyve ER -