Ambiguous Decisions Task

Ambiguous Decisions Task

CategoryDetails
DescriptionThe Ambiguous Decisions Task (van Mulukom et al., 2024) was developed to assess metacognitive trust in thinking styles. This 12-item instrument incorporates commonly used measures of analytical and intuitive thinking, including the Cognitive Reflection Test (CRT; Frederick, 2005) and the Rational Experiential Inventory (REI; Epstein et al., 1996). The instrument was tested with participants recruited via online social media, predominantly from American platforms, and included individuals from Brazil, Canada, and the United States. Factor analysis, reliability, and validity findings were provided.
AuthorVan Mulukom, Valerie; Baimel, Adam; Maraldi, Everton; Farias, Miguel
Author IdentifierValerie van Mulukom: ORCID Miguel Farias: ORCID
AffiliationValerie van Mulukom: Coventry University, Brain, Belief & Behaviour Lab Adam Baimel: Center for Psychological Research, Oxford Brookes University Everton Maraldi: Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo Miguel Farias: Coventry University, Brain, Belief & Behaviour Lab
Email[email protected]
Correspondence AddressValerie van Mulukom: Centre for Trust, Peace and Social Relations, Brain, Belief & Behaviour Lab, Innovation Village IV5, Cheetah Road, Coventry, United Kingdom, CV1 2TL
PurposeThis task is designed to provide independent scores on analytical and intuitive thinking without making normative statements or characterizations of personality traits.
ConstructThinking Style Trust
Instrument TypeTask
Test TypeOriginal
Test Year2024
FormatParticipants evaluate 12 ambiguous scenarios where one person is described as using an analytical thinking style and another as using an intuitive thinking style. They rate their support for each decision-making approach on a horizontal bar ranging from 0 (“Not at all”) to 100 (“Completely”), with increments of 10 for guidance.
Administration MethodElectronic
Number of Items12
Factors and SubscalesSubscales: Analytical Decisions, Intuitive Decisions
ReliabilityInternal Consistency: Cronbach’s alpha values of 0.83 (analytical decisions) and 0.87 (intuitive decisions) indicate high reliability, with no significant improvement from item elimination.
ValidityConvergent and Discriminant Validity: Analytical responses correlated positively with other analytical measures and negatively with intuitive measures, while intuitive responses showed the opposite pattern. Findings suggest the task captures metacognitive thinking styles distinct from object-level thinking styles.
Factor AnalysisExploratory Factor Analysis: Separate analyses were conducted for analytical and intuitive choices using common principal axis factor analysis. The first unrotated factor accounted for 36.9% of variance in analytical decisions (Eigenvalue = 4.42; factor loadings = 0.40 to 0.69) and 42.2% in intuitive decisions (Eigenvalue = 5.06; factor loadings = 0.44 to 0.72). No additional factors were examined due to scree plot tapering.
Test MethodologyTest Validity, Convergent Validity, Discriminant Validity, Test Reliability, Internal Consistency, Factor Analysis, Exploratory Factor Analysis
Age GroupAdulthood (18+ years)
Population GroupHuman; Male; Female
Population DetailsRespondents: Online adult participants Locations: Brazil, Canada, United States
KeywordsAnalytical Decisions, Intuitive Decisions, Metacognitive Trust, Thinking Styles, Decision-Making Processes
Index TermsCognitive Style, Decision Making, Metacognition, Thinking, Cognitive Measures
FilesNo file available for download.
Web SiteOSF Repository

Cite this article

Mohammed looti (2026). Ambiguous Decisions Task. PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES. Retrieved from https://scales.arabpsychology.com/s/ambiguous-decisions-task/

Mohammed looti. "Ambiguous Decisions Task." PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES, 4 Apr. 2026, https://scales.arabpsychology.com/s/ambiguous-decisions-task/.

Mohammed looti. "Ambiguous Decisions Task." PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES, 2026. https://scales.arabpsychology.com/s/ambiguous-decisions-task/.

Mohammed looti (2026) 'Ambiguous Decisions Task', PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES. Available at: https://scales.arabpsychology.com/s/ambiguous-decisions-task/.

[1] Mohammed looti, "Ambiguous Decisions Task," PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES, vol. X, no. Y, ص Z-Z, April, 2026.

Mohammed looti. Ambiguous Decisions Task. PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES. 2026;vol(issue):pages.

Slide Up
x
PDF
Scroll to Top