75 research outputs found

    Contrast effects in paired comparisons: Evidence for both stimulus-based and response-based processes.

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    Testing models of trade-off contrast in pairwise choice.

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    The category effect with rating scales: Number of categories, number of stimuli, and method of presentation.

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    Moderation of preference reversals in the long run.

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    Preference and the contextual basis of ideals in judgment and choice.

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    Information presentation constraints and the adaptive decision maker hypothesis.

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    How many calories were in those hamburgers again? Distribution density biases recall of attribute values

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    Decisions that consumers make often rest on evaluations of attributes, such as how large, expensive, good, or fattening an option seems. Extant research has demonstrated that these evaluations in turn depend upon the recently experienced distribution of attribute values (e.g., positively or negatively skewed). In many situations decisions rely on recalling the attribute values of each option, a process that has been neglected in much of the previous literature. In two experiments, participants learned attribute information for labeled stimuli presented within either a positively or negatively skewed distribution and then they recalled values from labels after approximately one minute. The results demonstrated effects that are inconsistent with predictions of the category-adjustment model (Duffy, Huttenlocher, Hedges & Crawford, 2010) that recalled values would shift toward the mean of the distribution of values presented. Instead, results were consistent with predictions of the comparison-induced distortion model (Choplin & Hummel, 2002) that remembered values would depend on the density of stimuli within the attribute range. Reasons for these results, alternative models, and implications for decision-making are discussed
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