Across a wide variety of situations, exposure to anchors has been shown to bias people’s estimates. What is not known, however, is whether externally provided anchors influence the confidence that people have in their estimates. Our studies had two goals. First, we tested whether exposure to anchors influenced people’s subjective confidence levels (Studies 1 and 2). These studies revealed that people who made estimates after making comparisons with externally provided anchors tended to be more confident in their estimates than people who did not see anchors. The second goal was to test two explanations as to why anchors increase people’s confidence. In Study 3, we tested the explanation that anchors increase confidence because participants ...
Document ID SPE-135538-MSAnchoring describes the tendency for people's estimates of unknown quantiti...
Claims of bias in other people are common, but when do we perceive bias in others? Some research h...
We investigated the possibility that verbal comparisons (Choplin & Hummel, 2002) mediate the eff...
Anchoring – the tendency for recently seen numbers to affect estimates – is a robust bias affecting ...
The anchoring-and-adjustment heuristic (Tversky & Kahneman, 1974) predicts elicitation of an initial...
Increasing accuracy motivation (e.g., by providing monetary incentives for accuracy) often fails to ...
2nd place in the field of Psychology at the Denman Undergraduate Research ForumNumerical Anchoring o...
Does desire for an outcome inflate optimism? Previous experiments have produced mixed results regard...
It is well-established that decision makers bias their estimates of unknown quantities in the direct...
Copyright © 2008 Society of Petroleum EngineersTversky and Kahneman [1] described the biases known a...
Anchoring is a well-known effect leading to bias in estimation in various decision-making contexts. ...
Living in the ‘Information Age’ means that not only access to information has become easier but also...
When people estimate a numeric value after judging whether it is larger or smaller than a high or lo...
Living in the 'Information Age' means that not only access to information has become easier but also...
Recent research suggests that an attitude change perspective on anchoring offers important supplemen...
Document ID SPE-135538-MSAnchoring describes the tendency for people's estimates of unknown quantiti...
Claims of bias in other people are common, but when do we perceive bias in others? Some research h...
We investigated the possibility that verbal comparisons (Choplin & Hummel, 2002) mediate the eff...
Anchoring – the tendency for recently seen numbers to affect estimates – is a robust bias affecting ...
The anchoring-and-adjustment heuristic (Tversky & Kahneman, 1974) predicts elicitation of an initial...
Increasing accuracy motivation (e.g., by providing monetary incentives for accuracy) often fails to ...
2nd place in the field of Psychology at the Denman Undergraduate Research ForumNumerical Anchoring o...
Does desire for an outcome inflate optimism? Previous experiments have produced mixed results regard...
It is well-established that decision makers bias their estimates of unknown quantities in the direct...
Copyright © 2008 Society of Petroleum EngineersTversky and Kahneman [1] described the biases known a...
Anchoring is a well-known effect leading to bias in estimation in various decision-making contexts. ...
Living in the ‘Information Age’ means that not only access to information has become easier but also...
When people estimate a numeric value after judging whether it is larger or smaller than a high or lo...
Living in the 'Information Age' means that not only access to information has become easier but also...
Recent research suggests that an attitude change perspective on anchoring offers important supplemen...
Document ID SPE-135538-MSAnchoring describes the tendency for people's estimates of unknown quantiti...
Claims of bias in other people are common, but when do we perceive bias in others? Some research h...
We investigated the possibility that verbal comparisons (Choplin & Hummel, 2002) mediate the eff...