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The Cognitive Science of Spreadsheet Errors: Why Thinking is Bad | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

The Cognitive Science of Spreadsheet Errors: Why Thinking is Bad


Abstract:

Research has long shown that spreadsheet developers are 96% to 99% accurate when they enter information into spreadsheet cells. For large spreadsheets, unfortunately, a c...Show More

Abstract:

Research has long shown that spreadsheet developers are 96% to 99% accurate when they enter information into spreadsheet cells. For large spreadsheets, unfortunately, a cell error rate of 1% to 6% will almost certainly lead to incorrect results. Can cell error rates (CERs) really be this high? General human error research has shown that when humans do simple but nontrivial cognitive tasks, they inevitably have comparable error rates. The problem is that human cognitive mechanisms have evolved to "gamble" in a way that will be correct nearly all of the time but that will fail a few percent of the time. Furthermore, our brain hides its inaccuracy from us, leaving us to believe strongly in the correctness of our work despite the presence of errors. This paper looks at cognitive science aspects of spreadsheet error commission. A subsequent paper will look at spreadsheet error detection.
Date of Conference: 07-10 January 2013
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 18 March 2013
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Conference Location: Wailea, HI, USA

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