Consumers often get unnecessarily mired in trivial decisions. Four studies support a metacognitive account for this painful phenomenon. Our central premise is that people use subjective experiences of difficulty while making a decision as a cue to how much further time and effort to spend. People generally associate important decisions with difficulty. Consequently, if a decision feels unexpectedly difficult, due to even incidental reasons, people may draw the reverse inference that it is also important, and consequently increase the amount of time and effort they expend. Ironically, this process is particularly likely for decisions that initially seemed unimportant because people expect them to be easier (whereas important decisions are ex...
Should I get chocolate ice cream as usual or try the lemon-chocolate mix from the weekly special? Ev...
Past studies have employed the subjective experience of decision time (Libet's W) as an index of con...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, 2003.Includes bi...
People often get unnecessarily mired in trivial decisions. Four studies support a metacognitive acco...
Consumers often get unnecessarily mired in trivial decisions. Four studies support a metacognitive a...
Bernard Nijstad, Gedrag & Organisatie, volume 24, September 2011, nr. 3, pp. 304-315.In the scie...
Seven studies were conducted to examine the role of experiential factors in sequential decisions. Pe...
Bernard Nijstad, Gedrag & Organisatie, volume 24, September 2011, nr. 3, pp. 304-315. In the scienti...
A series of 7 experiments found that people defer important decisions more than unimportant decision...
Decision research has traditionally focused on how people make choices between a given set of altern...
Conventional utility analysis assumes that individuals can give ‘certainty equivalent’ valuations of...
People make hundreds of decisions every day, and very little is known about how they do this. A big ...
A series of 7 experiments found that people defer important decisions more than unimportant decision...
We propose that consumer preferences are often systematically influenced by preference fluency, i.e....
ABSTRACT—Results from five studies of real-life decision making are compared. In these studies, part...
Should I get chocolate ice cream as usual or try the lemon-chocolate mix from the weekly special? Ev...
Past studies have employed the subjective experience of decision time (Libet's W) as an index of con...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, 2003.Includes bi...
People often get unnecessarily mired in trivial decisions. Four studies support a metacognitive acco...
Consumers often get unnecessarily mired in trivial decisions. Four studies support a metacognitive a...
Bernard Nijstad, Gedrag & Organisatie, volume 24, September 2011, nr. 3, pp. 304-315.In the scie...
Seven studies were conducted to examine the role of experiential factors in sequential decisions. Pe...
Bernard Nijstad, Gedrag & Organisatie, volume 24, September 2011, nr. 3, pp. 304-315. In the scienti...
A series of 7 experiments found that people defer important decisions more than unimportant decision...
Decision research has traditionally focused on how people make choices between a given set of altern...
Conventional utility analysis assumes that individuals can give ‘certainty equivalent’ valuations of...
People make hundreds of decisions every day, and very little is known about how they do this. A big ...
A series of 7 experiments found that people defer important decisions more than unimportant decision...
We propose that consumer preferences are often systematically influenced by preference fluency, i.e....
ABSTRACT—Results from five studies of real-life decision making are compared. In these studies, part...
Should I get chocolate ice cream as usual or try the lemon-chocolate mix from the weekly special? Ev...
Past studies have employed the subjective experience of decision time (Libet's W) as an index of con...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, 2003.Includes bi...