Hal R. Arkes, PhD, Senior Research Scholar, Center for HOPES; Professor, Dept. of Psychology; and Professor, Division of Health Services Management and Policy
Publications 2006
Arkes, H. R. (2006). From Taoism to Turing. Trends in Cognitive Science, 10, 98-99.
Arkes, H. R., & Shaffer. V. A. (2006). Should we use decision aids or gut feelings? In G. Gigerenzer and C. Engel (Eds.), Heuristics and the law. Dahlem Workshop Report 94 (pp. 411-424). Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
Goldstein, D. G., Arkes, H. R., et al. (2006). How do heuristics mediate the impact of law on behavior? In G. Gigerenzer and C. Engel (Eds.), Heuristics and the law. Dahlem Workshop Report 94 (pp. 439-465). Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
Arkes, H. R. (in press). Being an advocate for linear models of judgment is not an easy life. In J. Krueger (Ed.), Rationality and Social Responsibility: Essays in honor of Robyn Mason Dawes. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
Aberegg, S. K., Arkes, H. R., & Terry, P. B. (in press). Failure to adopt beneficial therapies caused by bias in medical evidence evaluation. Medical Decision Making.
Robinson, R., Arkes, H. R., & West, P. (in press). Innumeracy: The mathematical parallel to illiteracy. Annals of Pharmacotherapy.
Arkes, H. R., Shaffer, V. A., & Dawes, R. M. (in press). Comparing holistic and disaggregated ratings in the evaluation of scientific presentations. Journal of Behavioral Decision Making, 19.
Arkes, H. R., Shaffer, V. A., & Medow, M. A. (in press). Patients Derogate Physicians Who Use a Computer-Assisted Diagnostic Aid. Medical Decsion Making.
Publications 2005
Sieck, W. R., & Arkes, H. R. (2005). The recalcitrance of overconfidence and its contribution to decision aid neglect. Journal of Behavioral Decision Making, 18, 29-53.
Allard E. Dembe, ScD, Director, Center for HOPES; Chair and Associate Professor, Division of Health Services Management and Policy
W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research. $74,386. "How Demanding Work Schedules Affect Occupational Injury Risk." 2006-2007. (Principal Investigator).
California Healthcare Foundation. $10,800. "Updating of Workers' Compensation Fact Sheets." 2006. (Principal Investigator).
Hal R. Arkes, PhD, Senior Research Scholar, Center for HOPES; Professor, Division of Health Services Management and Policy; and Professor, Dept. of Psychology
National Science Foundation. $132,744. “Collaborative Research in Team Versus individual Play.” 2005-2007. (Co-Principal Investigator).
National Science Foundation. $172,111. “Collaborative Research: Reference Point Adaptation and Mental Accounting: Dynamic Extensions of Prospect Theory. 2004-2007. (Principal Investigator). Research Experience for Undergraduates Supplement: $4,174.
National Science Foundation. $56,693. "Coginitive Bases of Hindsight Effects." 2006-2007. (Principal Investigator).