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: The study tests various forms of numerical responses and visual displays to determine the specific conditions under which this "first digit phenomenon" occurs. Resource Links

: The paper builds on the work of Tversky and Kahneman (1974), exploring whether human numerical estimations follow predictable regularities.

If you are looking for the full document or associated data files typically found in such archives, you can access the thesis and related metadata through the following academic repositories: 57097.rar

The research investigates how humans generate numbers when faced with unknown or uncertain situations. Key findings and themes include:

: Available via the University of Sydney Library. : The study tests various forms of numerical

: A central focus is whether spontaneously generated unknown numbers exhibit a bias toward smaller leading digits (like 1 or 2), mimicking Benford’s Law found in natural datasets.

The identifier appears to be a specific compressed archive file associated with academic or technical papers. Based on available digital repository data, this file often corresponds to a paper titled " First Digit Phenomenon in Number Generation Under Uncertainty " by Chi-Deuk (Dean) Chi , submitted as a doctoral thesis at the University of Sydney . Summary of the Paper Key findings and themes include: : Available via

: Similar statistical or technical documents are often archived in platforms like the Digital Library of Georgia or GovInfo for historical commerce and tax data. Foreign Commerce of the United States - GovInfo

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