Derek J. Koehler’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Explanation, Imagination, and Confidence in Judgment
  • Article
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November 1991

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15 Reads

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210 Citations

Psychological Bulletin

Derek J. Koehler

This article concerns a class of experimental manipulations that require people to generate explanations or imagine scenarios. A review of studies using such manipulations indicates that people who explain or imagine a possibility then express greater confidence in the truth of that possibility. It is argued that this effect results from the approach people take in the explanation or imagination task: They temporarily assume that the hypothesis is true and assess how plausibly it can account for the relevant evidence. From this view, any task that requires that a hypothesis be treated as if it were true is sufficient to increase confidence in the truth of that hypothesis. Such tasks cause increased confidence in the hypothesis at the expense of viable alternatives because of changes in problem representation, evidence evaluation, and information search that take place when the hypothesis is temporarily treated as if it were true.

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Citations (1)


... This temporal focus influences goal setting and motivation (Fried and Slowik 2004). People who envision positive future selves and believe these futures are attainable are more likely to behave in ways that align with their imagined future identities (Koehler 1991;Markus and Ruvolo 1989). Given that people high in perceived economic mobility believe in the possibility of upward economic mobility, whereas those low in perceived mobility do not, the former are more likely to act according to their positive possible identities (i.e., affluent future self) by adopting upper-class norms. ...

Reference:

The Effect of Charitable Norms of Income Classes and Perceived Economic Mobility on Prosocial Behavior
Explanation, Imagination, and Confidence in Judgment

Psychological Bulletin