Judgement by outcomes: When is it justified

Author(s)
Hershey, J. C. and Baron, J.
Pages
4pp
Date published
01 Oct 1992
Publisher
Organizational Behaviour and Human Decision Processes
Type
Articles
Keywords
Assessment & Analysis, Evaluation-related

Use of outcome information in judgment is often taken to be an error of inference. In many cases, however, the outcome provides information about what was known to the decision maker but not to the judge of the decision. This fact makes it difficult to demonstrate nonnormative use of outcome information, and several investigators have not overcome the difficulty. We suggest three ways in which truly nonnormative use of outcome information can be shown.