Paul D Windschitl
Overview
Explore the profile of Paul D Windschitl including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles.
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31
Citations
211
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Recent Articles
1.
Strueder J, Windschitl P
J Exp Psychol Gen
. 2024 Aug;
153(8):2088-2099.
PMID: 39101908
Past research on advice-taking has suggested that people are often insensitive to the level of advice independence when combining forecasts from advisors. However, this has primarily been tested for cases...
2.
Strueder J, Miller J, Yu X, Windschitl P
Med Decis Making
. 2024 Jan;
44(2):141-151.
PMID: 38235561
Background: To assess the impact of risk perceptions on prevention efforts or behavior change, best practices involve conditional risk measures, which ask people to estimate their risk contingent on a...
3.
Stuart J, Windschitl P, Bossard E, Bruchmann K, Smith A, Rose J, et al.
J Behav Med
. 2023 Aug;
46(6):912-929.
PMID: 37558773
Assessing perceived vulnerability to a health threat is essential to understanding how people conceptualize their risk, and to predicting how likely they are to engage in protective behaviors. However, there...
4.
McDonnell S, Basir M, Yan K, Liegl M, Windschitl P
J Pediatr
. 2023 Mar;
257:113382.
PMID: 36894129
Objectives: To examine whether presenting a 30% or a 60% chance of survival in different survival information formats would influence hypothetical periviable birth treatment choice and whether treatment choice would...
5.
Park I, Windschitl P, Miller J, Smith A, Stuart J, Biangmano M
J Exp Psychol Gen
. 2022 Sep;
152(1):45-59.
PMID: 36048058
The refers to when people's expectations about an uncertain event are biased by outcome preferences. Prior work has provided limited evidence that the magnitude of this motivated bias depends on...
6.
Windschitl P, Miller J, Park I, Rule S, Clary A, Smith A
Cognition
. 2022 Aug;
229:105254.
PMID: 36029552
The desirability bias (or wishful thinking effect) refers to when a person's desire regarding an event's occurrence has an unwarranted, optimistic influence on expectations about that event. Past experimental tests...
7.
Miller J, Park I, Smith A, Windschitl P
Psychol Sci
. 2021 Sep;
32(10):1605-1616.
PMID: 34473591
Past work has suggested that people prescribe optimism-believing it is better to be optimistic, instead of accurate or pessimistic, about uncertain future events. Here, we identified and addressed an important...
8.
Park I, Windschitl P, Smith A, Rule S, Scherer A, Stuart J
PLoS One
. 2021 Feb;
16(2):e0245969.
PMID: 33571207
When making decisions involving risk, people may learn about the risk from descriptions or from experience. The description-experience gap refers to the difference in decision patterns driven by this discrepancy...
9.
Kaufman A, Twesten J, Suls J, McCaul K, Ostroff J, Ferrer R, et al.
Nicotine Tob Res
. 2019 Dec;
22(11):1937-1945.
PMID: 31883013
Implications: Incorporating the measurement suggestions for cigarette smoking risk perceptions that are presented will help researchers select items most appropriate for their research questions and will contribute to greater consistency...
10.
Witry M, St Marie B, Viyyuri B, Windschitl P
Pain Manag Nurs
. 2019 May;
21(1):48-56.
PMID: 31133408
Background: Prescription monitoring programs (PMPs) can provide health care professionals with valuable information. However, few studies have explored providers' decision making for accessing PMPs. Aims: This study aimed to identify...