This paper investigates two alternative mechanisms through which rankings may influence attribute weights. While the choice of sorting attribute may serve as a sign of relevance (conversational norms mechanism), consumers could also deduce attribute importance from the ease of processing (fluency mechanism). It is shown that rankings only influence the weight of less familiar attributes. Using eye-movement data, we found the sorting attribute to correspond with a decrease in attention, which is not compatible with the conversational norms mechanism. We provide evidence for the “ease of comparison” as an explaining factor with a cognitive load manipulation
[[abstract]]Many decision making problems of business and management are formulated in terms of Mult...
Online search intermediaries, such as Amazon or Expedia, use rankings (ordered lists) to present thi...
Although choice experiments (CEs) are widely applied in economics to study choice behaviour, underst...
This paper investigates two alternative mechanisms through which rankings may influence attribute we...
Information about alternatives often appears in a ranking, with the alternatives sorted by some attr...
Rankings are widely used but little research has examined their influence on consumer decision makin...
Magnitudes describing product attributes are basic elements used in decision making. Although severa...
The aim of the present research was to investigate the evaluation and weighting mechanisms people em...
Rankings reveal important information about relative performance in competitive settings. Despite th...
When a prominent attribute looms larger in one response procedure than in another, a violation of pr...
In a world with a tremendous amount of choices, ranking systems are becoming increasingly important ...
Why do people sometimes struggle with decisions that once seemed relatively simple? This research su...
Previous research suggests that consumers tend to use indications of products’ popularity to a great...
[[abstract]]Many decision making problems of business and management are formulated in terms of Mult...
Online search intermediaries, such as Amazon or Expedia, use rankings (ordered lists) to present thi...
Although choice experiments (CEs) are widely applied in economics to study choice behaviour, underst...
This paper investigates two alternative mechanisms through which rankings may influence attribute we...
Information about alternatives often appears in a ranking, with the alternatives sorted by some attr...
Rankings are widely used but little research has examined their influence on consumer decision makin...
Magnitudes describing product attributes are basic elements used in decision making. Although severa...
The aim of the present research was to investigate the evaluation and weighting mechanisms people em...
Rankings reveal important information about relative performance in competitive settings. Despite th...
When a prominent attribute looms larger in one response procedure than in another, a violation of pr...
In a world with a tremendous amount of choices, ranking systems are becoming increasingly important ...
Why do people sometimes struggle with decisions that once seemed relatively simple? This research su...
Previous research suggests that consumers tend to use indications of products’ popularity to a great...
[[abstract]]Many decision making problems of business and management are formulated in terms of Mult...
Online search intermediaries, such as Amazon or Expedia, use rankings (ordered lists) to present thi...
Although choice experiments (CEs) are widely applied in economics to study choice behaviour, underst...