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Journal Article

Citation

Haselton MG, Nettle D. Pers. Soc. Psychol. Rev. 2006; 10(1): 47-66.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Human cognition is often biased, from judgments of the time of impact of approaching objects all the way through to estimations of social outcomes in the future. We propose these effects and a host of others may, all be understood from an evolutionary psychological perspective. In this article, we elaborate error management theory (EMT; Haselton and Buss, 2000). EMT predicts that if judgments are made under uncertainty, and the costs of false positive and false negative errors have been asymmetric over evolutionary history, selection should have favored a bias toward making the least costly error. This perspective integrates a diverse array of effects under a single explanatory umbrella, and it yields new content-specific predictions.

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