This is the finding of a study in Springer's journal Psychonomic Bulletin & Review that investigates how people
make judgment calls after playing role - playing video games.
Not exact matches
You'd think that investors would be among the most cold - blooded and rational consumers of information —
after all, fortunes depend on them
making bias - free
judgments about what they hear on earnings
calls — but according to this new research, they are actually highly swayed by one tiny shift in language, just like everyone.
After the price of $ BITA spiked above the $ 20 level, we
made a
judgment call to trail a tight stop below the prior day's low in order to lock in gains in the event of a sharp pullback.
This includes disagreements over
judgment calls made by lenders or their agents; changes in circumstances occurring
after the underwriting process has been completed; small mistakes that bear little relation to either the credit risk or the subsequent default; and inconsistent interpretations of the rules.
Because such price action occurred
after an extended, four - week rally, we
made a
judgment call to raise the stop to just below the two - day lows, which would enable us to lock in a very large gain in the event of another pullback.
Instead, the case dragged on for two years; the docket sheet has around 80 entries; both sides hired computer experts, and in the end the case was dismissed on summary
judgment, in a decision where the judge spent almost 40 pages analyzing every claim
made by Healthcare and dismissing it only
after rigorous and in - depth analysis which went, in my opinion, far beyond the
call of duty.