Subtle primes can influence behavior, often in ways that seem irrational. Anchoring provides a compelling illustration of this: judgments can be influenced by anchors even when the anchors are known to be irrelevant and uninformative. In this article, we selectively examine the anchoring literature in order to evaluate a theoretical framework which has been employed to interpret many social and other priming effects. In this framework, primes are assumed to have broad effects, influencing a wide range of possible downstream behaviors, and these influences are largely automatic. The anchoring literature supports neither of these hypotheses. Anchors have narrow effects on behavior with little transfer across judgments, these effects can be co...
In a classic experiment, Srull and Wyer (1979) showed that when participants were incidentally expos...
Anchoring – the tendency for recently seen numbers to affect estimates – is a robust bias affecting ...
Consumers are constantly exposed to subtle situational cues that can influence behavior by priming e...
<p>Psychological researchers have found that exposures to stimuli (primes) can subsequently influenc...
Research on priming effects has shown that primes with widely shared associations (i.e., stereotypes...
Results of 3 studies support the notion that anchoring is a special case of semantic priming; specif...
2nd place in the field of Psychology at the Denman Undergraduate Research ForumNumerical Anchoring o...
Recent research suggests that an attitude change perspective on anchoring offers important supplemen...
Although the anchoring effect is one of the most reliable results of experimental psychology, resear...
Behavioral priming traces its roots back to 1890, but recently has been criticized for failure to re...
Social priming has been a fundamental methodological practice in experimental social psychology for ...
This dissertation proposes a unified conceptualization of a set of seemingly distinct judgmental anc...
In the Affective Misattribution Procedure (AMP; Payne, Cheng, Govorun, & Stewart, 2005) pairs of pri...
The authors conducted 4 repetition priming experiments that manipulated prime duration and prime dia...
Anchoring effects are robust, varied and can be consequential. Researchers have provided a variety o...
In a classic experiment, Srull and Wyer (1979) showed that when participants were incidentally expos...
Anchoring – the tendency for recently seen numbers to affect estimates – is a robust bias affecting ...
Consumers are constantly exposed to subtle situational cues that can influence behavior by priming e...
<p>Psychological researchers have found that exposures to stimuli (primes) can subsequently influenc...
Research on priming effects has shown that primes with widely shared associations (i.e., stereotypes...
Results of 3 studies support the notion that anchoring is a special case of semantic priming; specif...
2nd place in the field of Psychology at the Denman Undergraduate Research ForumNumerical Anchoring o...
Recent research suggests that an attitude change perspective on anchoring offers important supplemen...
Although the anchoring effect is one of the most reliable results of experimental psychology, resear...
Behavioral priming traces its roots back to 1890, but recently has been criticized for failure to re...
Social priming has been a fundamental methodological practice in experimental social psychology for ...
This dissertation proposes a unified conceptualization of a set of seemingly distinct judgmental anc...
In the Affective Misattribution Procedure (AMP; Payne, Cheng, Govorun, & Stewart, 2005) pairs of pri...
The authors conducted 4 repetition priming experiments that manipulated prime duration and prime dia...
Anchoring effects are robust, varied and can be consequential. Researchers have provided a variety o...
In a classic experiment, Srull and Wyer (1979) showed that when participants were incidentally expos...
Anchoring – the tendency for recently seen numbers to affect estimates – is a robust bias affecting ...
Consumers are constantly exposed to subtle situational cues that can influence behavior by priming e...