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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Paul_SlovicPaul Slovic - Wikipedia

    Paul Slovic (born 1938 in Chicago) is a professor of psychology at the University of Oregon and the president of Decision Research. Decision Research is a collection of scientists from all over the nation and in other countries that study decision-making in times when risks are involved.

  2. 11 de may. de 2021 · Paul Slovic, a founder and President of Decision Research and Professor of Psychology at the University of Oregon, studies human judgment, decision making, and risk analysis. He and his colleagues worldwide have developed methods to describe risk perceptions and measure their impacts on individuals, industry, and society.

  3. 3653. 2016. Comparison of Bayesian and regression approaches to the study of information processing in judgment. P Slovic, S Lichtenstein. Organizational behavior and human performance 6 (6), 649-744. , 1971. 2963. 1971. Perceived risk, trust, and democracy.

  4. Paul Slovic, president of Decision Research and professor of psychology at the University of Oregon, has been featured in number of recent podcast and radio shows to lend his expertise on psychic numbing, the Covid-19 pandemic, and other topics. . . . Read More →.

  5. Paul SLOVIC | Professor of Psychology | University of Oregon, Oregon | UO | Department of Psychology | Research profile. About. 570. Publications. 297,387. Reads. 102,458. Citations....

  6. Psychology. Email: pslovic@uoregon.edu. Phone: 541-485-2400. Office: Decision Research. Research Interests: Social/Personality, Judgment and Decision Making, Risk Perception, Affect and Information Processing, Genocide, Human Rights, Virtuous Violence, Preventing Nuclear War, Behavioral Economics. Website: http://www.decisionresearch.org. Biography

  7. Paul Slovic. Image courtesy of Paul Slovic. According to research by psychologist Paul Slovic, the international response would have been less charitable had the public seen the other drowned refugees. “If we had seen just one more individual, our compassion toward them all might have faded,” he explains.