Windschitl, P. D. (2002). Judging the accuracy of a likelihood judgment: The
case of smoking risk. Journal of Behavioral Decision Making, 15, 19-35.
A standard
method for assessing whether people have appropriate internal representations
of an event's likelihood is to check whether their subjective probability or
frequency estimates for the event correspond with the assumed objective value
for that event. When a person's estimate for the event exceeds its assumed objective
probability or frequency, the person's expectancy for the event is concluded
to be greater than warranted. This paper describes three lines of reasoning
as to why conclusions of this sort can be problematic. Recently published findings
as well as data from two new experiments are described to support this main
thesis. The case of smoking risk is used to illustrate the more general problem,
and issues that must be considered to avoid or contend with the problem are
discussed.