Contains fulltext : 77301.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In five experiments we found that deliberation reduces preference consistency. In experiments 1 and 2, participants who deliberated on their preferences were less consistent in their evaluations compared to those who did not deliberate. Experiment 3 demonstrated that this effect is due to the impediment of deliberation and not to the benefit of nondeliberation. We hypothesized that deliberation leads to the inconsistent weighting of information, especially when the information is complex. As such, we predicted and found in experiments 4 and 5 that the extent to which deliberation decreases preference consistency depends upon the complexity of the information
We propose that consumer preferences are often systematically influenced by preference fluency, i.e....
Majority cycling and related social choice paradoxes are often thought to threaten the meaningfulnes...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. July 2011. Major: Psychology. Advisors: Dr. Eugene Borgi...
In five experiments we found that deliberation reduces preference consistency. In experiments 1 and ...
Computational models of decision making typically assume as people deliberate between options they m...
The view that people should carefully consider their options forms the cornerstone of rational decis...
Deliberation is commonly assumed to be a central characteristic of humans’ higher cognitive function...
Two experiments were designed to test the hypothesis that affective information looms relatively lar...
A criticism against individual-based stated preference surveys is that people seldom make choices in...
This paper analyzes the way participants change their mind in a deliberative forum. Its contribution...
Despite growing interest in deliberative initiatives, there remains a gap between theoretical work o...
When choosing among several options, people often defer choice. Previous research found that choice ...
Certain experiments have shown that reasoning may weaken the stability of people's preferences, espe...
This article is based on three experiments in citizen deliberation. We ask whether disagreement at g...
Contains fulltext : 55729.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Contrary to co...
We propose that consumer preferences are often systematically influenced by preference fluency, i.e....
Majority cycling and related social choice paradoxes are often thought to threaten the meaningfulnes...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. July 2011. Major: Psychology. Advisors: Dr. Eugene Borgi...
In five experiments we found that deliberation reduces preference consistency. In experiments 1 and ...
Computational models of decision making typically assume as people deliberate between options they m...
The view that people should carefully consider their options forms the cornerstone of rational decis...
Deliberation is commonly assumed to be a central characteristic of humans’ higher cognitive function...
Two experiments were designed to test the hypothesis that affective information looms relatively lar...
A criticism against individual-based stated preference surveys is that people seldom make choices in...
This paper analyzes the way participants change their mind in a deliberative forum. Its contribution...
Despite growing interest in deliberative initiatives, there remains a gap between theoretical work o...
When choosing among several options, people often defer choice. Previous research found that choice ...
Certain experiments have shown that reasoning may weaken the stability of people's preferences, espe...
This article is based on three experiments in citizen deliberation. We ask whether disagreement at g...
Contains fulltext : 55729.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Contrary to co...
We propose that consumer preferences are often systematically influenced by preference fluency, i.e....
Majority cycling and related social choice paradoxes are often thought to threaten the meaningfulnes...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. July 2011. Major: Psychology. Advisors: Dr. Eugene Borgi...