Abstract—People’s estimates of uncertain quantities are commonly influenced by irrelevant values. These anchoring effects were origi-nally explained as insufficient adjustment away from an initial anchor value. The existing literature provides little support for the postulated process of adjustment, however, and a consensus that none takes place seems to be emerging. We argue that this conclusion is premature, and we present evidence that insufficient adjustment produces anchoring effects when the anchors are self-generated. In Study 1, participants’ verbal reports made reference to adjustment only from self-generated anchors. In Studies 2 and 3, participants induced to accept values by nodding their heads gave answers that were closer to a...
2nd place in the field of Psychology at the Denman Undergraduate Research ForumNumerical Anchoring o...
The impact of false information on numerical judgments was examined on young normal subjects by an e...
People's estimates of numerical quantities are systematically biased towards their initial guess. Th...
ABSTRACT—Oneway tomake judgments under uncertainty is to anchor on information that comes to mind an...
Increasing accuracy motivation (e.g., by providing monetary incentives for accuracy) often fails to ...
Many judgmental biases are thought to be the product of insuffi-cient adjustment from an initial anc...
An assimilation of an estimate towards a previously considered standard is defined as judgmental anc...
Although the anchoring effect is one of the most reliable results of experimental psychology, resear...
Ego depletion is a state in which people prefer to avoid mental effort, therefore possibly leading t...
The anchoring-and-adjustment heuristic (Tversky & Kahneman, 1974) predicts elicitation of an ini...
Anchoring is a judgmental bias that final judgments are assimilated toward the starting point of the...
Two experiments examined the impact of financial incentives and forewarnings on judgmental anchoring...
People can easily infer the thoughts and feelings of others from brief descriptions of scenarios. Bu...
Recent research suggests that an attitude change perspective on anchoring offers important supplemen...
Anchoring – the tendency for recently seen numbers to affect estimates – is a robust bias affecting ...
2nd place in the field of Psychology at the Denman Undergraduate Research ForumNumerical Anchoring o...
The impact of false information on numerical judgments was examined on young normal subjects by an e...
People's estimates of numerical quantities are systematically biased towards their initial guess. Th...
ABSTRACT—Oneway tomake judgments under uncertainty is to anchor on information that comes to mind an...
Increasing accuracy motivation (e.g., by providing monetary incentives for accuracy) often fails to ...
Many judgmental biases are thought to be the product of insuffi-cient adjustment from an initial anc...
An assimilation of an estimate towards a previously considered standard is defined as judgmental anc...
Although the anchoring effect is one of the most reliable results of experimental psychology, resear...
Ego depletion is a state in which people prefer to avoid mental effort, therefore possibly leading t...
The anchoring-and-adjustment heuristic (Tversky & Kahneman, 1974) predicts elicitation of an ini...
Anchoring is a judgmental bias that final judgments are assimilated toward the starting point of the...
Two experiments examined the impact of financial incentives and forewarnings on judgmental anchoring...
People can easily infer the thoughts and feelings of others from brief descriptions of scenarios. Bu...
Recent research suggests that an attitude change perspective on anchoring offers important supplemen...
Anchoring – the tendency for recently seen numbers to affect estimates – is a robust bias affecting ...
2nd place in the field of Psychology at the Denman Undergraduate Research ForumNumerical Anchoring o...
The impact of false information on numerical judgments was examined on young normal subjects by an e...
People's estimates of numerical quantities are systematically biased towards their initial guess. Th...