In 5 experiments, college students exhibited a group size effect on risk judgments. As the number of individuals in a target group increased, so did participants ’ judgments of the risk of the average member of the group for a variety of negative life events. This happened regardless of whether the stimuli consisted of photographs of real peers or stick-figure representations of peers. As a result, the degree to which participants exhibited comparative optimism (i.e., judged themselves to be at lower risk than their peers) also increased as the size of the comparison group increased. These results suggest that the typical comparative optimism effect reported so often in the literature might be, at least in part, a group size effect. Additio...
Rather than a unitary value, individuals may represent health risk as a fuzzy entity that permits th...
Day-to-day interactions often involve individuals interacting with groups, but little is known about...
International audienceComparative optimism can be defined as a self-serving, asymmetric judgment of ...
In 5 experiments, college students exhibited a group size effect on risk judgments. As the number of...
N. D. Weinstein (1980) established that optimistic bias, the tendency to see others as more vulnerab...
Using Kahneman and Tversky's life-death decision paradigm, Wang and colleagues (e.g., Wang and Johns...
This study explores the influence of different social reference points and different comparison grou...
Amy S.Y. Ho.Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1997.Includes bibliographical referen...
We review explanations offered by researchers for optimism in comparative risk judgments – the belie...
Presents results of an investigation into the occurrence of optimistic bias in relation to both posi...
In many studies on comparative optimism, participants estimate the likelihood that various events wi...
Despite vigorous research on risk communication, little is known about the social forces that drive ...
People typically attribute lower health risks to themselves than to others, a phenomenon referred to...
We examined whether comparative optimism characterizes the events people generate when they describe...
The group-diffusion effect is the tendency for people to judge themselves to be less likely to exper...
Rather than a unitary value, individuals may represent health risk as a fuzzy entity that permits th...
Day-to-day interactions often involve individuals interacting with groups, but little is known about...
International audienceComparative optimism can be defined as a self-serving, asymmetric judgment of ...
In 5 experiments, college students exhibited a group size effect on risk judgments. As the number of...
N. D. Weinstein (1980) established that optimistic bias, the tendency to see others as more vulnerab...
Using Kahneman and Tversky's life-death decision paradigm, Wang and colleagues (e.g., Wang and Johns...
This study explores the influence of different social reference points and different comparison grou...
Amy S.Y. Ho.Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1997.Includes bibliographical referen...
We review explanations offered by researchers for optimism in comparative risk judgments – the belie...
Presents results of an investigation into the occurrence of optimistic bias in relation to both posi...
In many studies on comparative optimism, participants estimate the likelihood that various events wi...
Despite vigorous research on risk communication, little is known about the social forces that drive ...
People typically attribute lower health risks to themselves than to others, a phenomenon referred to...
We examined whether comparative optimism characterizes the events people generate when they describe...
The group-diffusion effect is the tendency for people to judge themselves to be less likely to exper...
Rather than a unitary value, individuals may represent health risk as a fuzzy entity that permits th...
Day-to-day interactions often involve individuals interacting with groups, but little is known about...
International audienceComparative optimism can be defined as a self-serving, asymmetric judgment of ...