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1. Representative DesignEgon Brunswik (1903-1955) “There is little technical basis for telling whether a given experiment is an ecological normal, located in the midst of a crowd of natural instances, or whether it is more like a bearded lady at the fringes of reality, or perhaps like a mere homunculus of the laboratory out in the blank.”
Brunswik (1955) p. 204
Our work is inspired by ideas put forth by Egon Brunswik. One of the major ideas that he contributed to the field of psychology was a methodological innovation called representative design. Representative design means that one designs their study materials and methods in such a way that the environmental properties of the context in which one wishes to generalize to are preserved. Our work is inspired by ideas put forth by Egon Brunswik. One of the major ideas that he contributed to the field of psychology was a methodological innovation called representative design. Representative design means that one designs their study materials and methods in such a way that the environmental properties of the context in which one wishes to generalize to are preserved.
2. Representative DesignEgon Brunswik (1903-1955) Designing study in such a way that the properties of the environmental context to which one wishes to generalize are preserved.
Our work is inspired by ideas put forth by Egon Brunswik. One of the major ideas that he contributed to the field of psychology was a methodological innovation called representative design. Representative design means that one designs their study materials and methods in such a way that the environmental properties of the context in which one wishes to generalize to are preserved. Our work is inspired by ideas put forth by Egon Brunswik. One of the major ideas that he contributed to the field of psychology was a methodological innovation called representative design. Representative design means that one designs their study materials and methods in such a way that the environmental properties of the context in which one wishes to generalize to are preserved.
3. Lens Model Measuring Judgment Accuracy Compare judgment to criterion Examine agreement across judges Determine if bad cues are used Determine if good cues are missed