Ward Edwards is well known as the father of behavioral decision making. In his 1954 Psychological Bulletin paper on decision making, he brought psychological ideas into what had been the province of economists. His influence in this realm is so pervasive that the Nobel committee was able to trace a direct path from Edwards's work to Daniel Kahneman's 2002 Prize for prospect theory. In a 1963 Psychological Review paper, Edwards brought Bayesian statistics to the attention of psychologists, who have continued to proliferate Bayesian ideas, underscoring the importance of the perspective. In a 1962 IEEE paper, Edwards foresaw how the world of intelligence gathering and analysis could by transformed by systems in which humans provided (subjective) probabilities and machines provided computational power. He also showed, in a 1986 book written with Detlof von Winterfeldt, how multiattribute utility analysis could help real-world decision makers generate satisfactory solutions to complex problems. In this book, 29 of Ward Edwards's most important published papers are reprinted, a selection that spans six decades, allowing the reader to see how this strikingly creative thinker generated many of the ideas that are now core beliefs among current researchers. It is perhaps less well known that Edwards continued to make substantial contributions during the years after his retirement. Illness reduced his public appearances, but he continued his incisive thinking behind the scenes. At the time of his passing, he was involved in several projects, and seven new papers from these projects were completed for this book by his last set of collaborators. Edwards's papers are a treat to read. His prose is the model of elegant simplicity, yet full of style and wit. With each paper, the editors have included a short introduction that presents Edwards's reflections on the content or impact of the older papers, or describes the creation of the new ones. Obituaries written by former students and colleagues flesh out the human side of this remarkable scholar.
Jie W. Weiss earned a doctorate in clinical health psychology from Alliant University after spending the early part of her academic career as a professor of American literature in China. During a postdoctoral period at the University of Southern California, she worked on the problem of adolescent smoking and drug use. Currently a faculty member in the Department of Health Science at California State University, Fullerton, she adopted a decision-making focus for her research after meeting Ward Edwards. David J. Weiss received his bachelor's degree from the University of Pennsylvania and his doctorate from the University of California, San Diego. Since 1970, he has been in the Psychology Department at California State University, Los Angeles. His research domain is judgment and decision making, with recent emphasis on the assessment of expertise when no external standard of proficiency is available.
Show moreWard Edwards is well known as the father of behavioral decision making. In his 1954 Psychological Bulletin paper on decision making, he brought psychological ideas into what had been the province of economists. His influence in this realm is so pervasive that the Nobel committee was able to trace a direct path from Edwards's work to Daniel Kahneman's 2002 Prize for prospect theory. In a 1963 Psychological Review paper, Edwards brought Bayesian statistics to the attention of psychologists, who have continued to proliferate Bayesian ideas, underscoring the importance of the perspective. In a 1962 IEEE paper, Edwards foresaw how the world of intelligence gathering and analysis could by transformed by systems in which humans provided (subjective) probabilities and machines provided computational power. He also showed, in a 1986 book written with Detlof von Winterfeldt, how multiattribute utility analysis could help real-world decision makers generate satisfactory solutions to complex problems. In this book, 29 of Ward Edwards's most important published papers are reprinted, a selection that spans six decades, allowing the reader to see how this strikingly creative thinker generated many of the ideas that are now core beliefs among current researchers. It is perhaps less well known that Edwards continued to make substantial contributions during the years after his retirement. Illness reduced his public appearances, but he continued his incisive thinking behind the scenes. At the time of his passing, he was involved in several projects, and seven new papers from these projects were completed for this book by his last set of collaborators. Edwards's papers are a treat to read. His prose is the model of elegant simplicity, yet full of style and wit. With each paper, the editors have included a short introduction that presents Edwards's reflections on the content or impact of the older papers, or describes the creation of the new ones. Obituaries written by former students and colleagues flesh out the human side of this remarkable scholar.
Jie W. Weiss earned a doctorate in clinical health psychology from Alliant University after spending the early part of her academic career as a professor of American literature in China. During a postdoctoral period at the University of Southern California, she worked on the problem of adolescent smoking and drug use. Currently a faculty member in the Department of Health Science at California State University, Fullerton, she adopted a decision-making focus for her research after meeting Ward Edwards. David J. Weiss received his bachelor's degree from the University of Pennsylvania and his doctorate from the University of California, San Diego. Since 1970, he has been in the Psychology Department at California State University, Los Angeles. His research domain is judgment and decision making, with recent emphasis on the assessment of expertise when no external standard of proficiency is available.
Show moreIntroduction by the Editors Contributors to papers written
especially for this Volume Complete listing of publications written
or co-written by Edwards
I Papers on Behavioral Decision Theory
1: Edwards, W. (1954). The theory of decision making. Psychological
Bulletin, 51, 380-417
2: Edwards, W. (1961). Behavioral decision theory. Annual Review of
Psychology, 12, 473-498
3: Edwards, W. (1961). Probability learning in 1000 trials. Journal
of Experimental Psychology, 62, 385-94
4: Edwards, W. (1962). Dynamic decision theory and probabilistic
information processing. Human Factors, 4, 59-73
5: Edwards, W. (1962). Subjective probabilities inferred from
decisions. Psychological Review, 69, 109-135
6: Phillips, L.D., & Edwards, W. (1966). Conservatism in a simple
probability inference task. Journal of Experimental Psychology, 72,
346-354
7: Miller, L.W., Kaplan, R.J., & Edwards, W. (1969). JUDGE: A
laboratory evaluation. Organizational Behavior and Human
Performance, 4, 97-111
8: Edwards, W. (1971). Bayesian and regression models of human
information processing: A myopic perspective. Organizational
Behavior and Human Performance, 6, 639-648
9: Fryback, D.G. & Edwards, W. (1973). Choices among bets by Las
Vegas gamblers: Absolute and contextual effects. Journal of
Experimental Psychology, 98, 271-278
10: Edwards, W. (1998). Hailfinder: Tools for and experiences with
Bayesian normative modeling. American Psychologist, 53, 416-428
II Papers on Statistics and Methodology
11: Edwards, W. (1961). Costs and payoffs are instructions.
Psychological Review, 68, 275-284
12: Edwards, W., Lindman, H., & Savage, L.J. (1963). Bayesian
statistical inference for psychological research. Psychological
Review, 70, 193-242
13: Edwards, W. (1965). Tactical note on the relation between
scientific and statistical hypotheses. Psychological Bulletin, 63,
400-402
14: Slovic, P., Lichtensen, S. & Edwards, W. (1965).
Boredom-induced changes in preferences among bets. American Journal
of Psychology, 78, 208-217.
15: Edwards, W. (1983). Human cognitive capabilities,
representativeness, and ground rules for research. In P.C.
Humphreys, O. Svenson, & A. Vari (Eds.), Analyzing and aiding
decision processes (pp. 507-513). Amsterdam: North-Holland
16: von Winterfeldt, D., & Edwards, W. (1982). Costs and payoffs in
perceptual research. Psychological Bulletin, 91, 609-622.
17: Edwards, W., Schum D., & Winkler, R.L. (1990). Murder and (of?)
the likelihood principle: A trialogue. Journal of Behavioral
Decision Making, 3, 75-87
18: Weiss, D.J., & Edwards, W. (2005). A mean for all seasons.
Behavior Research Methods, 37, 677-683
19: Weiss, J.W., Edwards, W., & Weiss, D.J. (prepared for this
volume). The clinical significance decision
20: Weiss, D.J., Edwards, W., & Shanteau, J. (prepared for this
volume). The measurement of behavior: Indices and standards
III Papers on Diagnosis
21: Gustafson, D. H., Edwards, W., Phillips, L. D., & Slack, W. V.
(1969). Subjective probabilities in medical diagnosis. IEEE
Transactions on Man-Machine Systems, MMS-10, 3, 61-65
22: Edwards, W. (1972). N = 1. Diagnosis in unique cases. In J. A.
Jacquez (Ed.) Computer diagnosis and diagnostic methods (pp.
139-151). Springfield, Il: Charles C. Thomas
23: Edwards, W. (1972). N = 1. Diagnosis in unique cases. In J. A.
Jacquez (Ed.) Computer diagnosis and diagnostic methods (pp.
139-151). Springfield, Il: Charles C. Thomas
24: Thornbury, J. R., Fryback, D. G., & Edwards, W. (1975).
Likelihood ratios as a measure of the diagnostic usefulness of
excretory urogram information. Radiology, 114, 561-565
25: Shanteau, J., Edwards, W., & Weiss, D. J. (prepared for this
volume). Diagnosis and treatment
IV Papers on Multiattribute Utility
26: Gardiner, P.C., & Edwards, W. (1975). Public values:
Multi-attribute utility measurement for social decision making. In
M. F. Kaplan & S. Schwartz (Eds.), Human judgment and decision
processes (pp. 1-37). New York: Academic Press
27: Edwards, W. (1977). How to use multiattribute utility
measurement for social decision making. IEEE Transactions on
Systems, Man, & Cybernetics, 7, 326-340
28: Edwards, W. (1979). Multiattribute utility measurement:
Evaluating desegregation plans in a highly political context. In R.
Perloff (Ed.), Evaluator interventions: Pros and cons (pp. 13-54).
Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Edwards, W. (1980). Reflections on and
criticisms of ahighly political multiattribute utility analysis. In
L. Cobb & R. M. Thrall (Eds.), Mathematical frontiers of behavioral
and policy sciences (pp.157-186). Boulder, CO: Westview Press
29: Stillwell, W.G., Barron, F. H., & Edwards, W. (1983).
Evaluating credit applications: A validation of multiattribute
utility weight elicitation techniques. Organizational Behavior &
Human Decision Processes, 32, 87-108
30: Edwards, W. & Barron, F. H. (1994). SMARTS and SMARTER:
Improved simple methods for multiattribute utility measurement.
Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 60,
306-325
31: Edwards, W., & Fasolo, B. (2001). Decision technology. Annual
Review of Psychology, 52, 581-606
32: Weiss, J. W., Edwards, W., & Mouttapa, M. (prepared for this
volume). The puzzle of adolescent substance initiation
33: Weiss, J. W., Weiss, D. J., & Edwards, W. (prepared for this
volume). Big decisions, little decisions: The hierarchy of everyday
life
34: . Bauer, J., Spackman, S., & Edwards, W. (prepared for this
volume). The clinical decision tree of oral health in
geriatrics
35: . Weiss, D. J., Edwards, W., & Weiss, J. W. (prepared for this
volume). Why is a bird in the hand worth two in the bush?
V Obituaries
36: Dennis G. Fryback, Society for Medical Decision Making
Newsletter, Summer 2005
37: Lawrence D. Phillips, European Association for Decision Making
Bulletin, Spring/Summer 2005
38: David J. Weiss & James Shanteau, Society for Judgment/Decision
Making Newsletter, March 2005
Jie W. Weiss earned a doctorate in clinical health psychology from
Alliant University after spending the early part of her academic
career as a professor of American literature in China. During a
postdoctoral period at the University of Southern California, she
worked on the problem of adolescent smoking and drug use. Currently
a faculty member in the Department of Health Science at California
State University, Fullerton, she adopted a decision-making focus
for her
research after meeting Ward Edwards.
David J. Weiss received his bachelor's degree from the University
of Pennsylvania and his doctorate from the University of
California, San Diego. Since 1970, he has been in the Psychology
Department at California State University, Los Angeles. His
research domain is judgment and decision making, with recent
emphasis on the assessment of expertise when no external standard
of proficiency is available.
"Why would anyone want to read a collection of someone's articles,
some more than
40 years old and most of which can be found in other sources?
Primarily because they are
still worth reading, and having them available in one collection is
very helpful. Knowing
what inspired the articles gives them an added significance, and
many of the older articles
afford insights into topics that are central to the study of
decision making today. The writing
style is always elegant and witty. While technical language is
essential for topics that are
treated with mathematical precision, the technical details are
accompanied by readily
accessible explanations." --Gordon Pitz in PsycCRITIQUES
"This is a remarkable book. The editors, Jie and David Weiss,
deserve high praise for the monumental task they have accomplished
in providing the best and most thorough analyses of decision-making
research conducted by the field's foremost scholar--Ward Edwards.
The excellent collection of essays virtually encircles extant
perspectives on knowledge and thought concerning decision-making
processes. Reading this volume will undoubtedly make the reader a
better
decision maker."--Anthony D. Ong, Assistant Professor of Human
Development, Cornell University
"Ward Edwards attracted many excellent collaborators in his long
and illustrious career. Two of them were Jie Weiss and David Weiss.
Their book is a wonderful collection of Ward's work from his early
to late years, some published for the first time here. The book
deserves to be in the hands of anyone seeking inspiration for
studying or improving how decisions are made."--Warren Thorngate,
Professor of Psychology, Carleton University
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