Intuitive Politicians or Unintuitive Penitents? Regret Aversion, Accountability and Justification in the Decoy Effect

Several studies have shown that the decoy (or attraction) effect is amplified when participants anticipate having to justify their choices to an external audience. We report here two experiments examining the impact on the decoy effect of making future regret possibilities salient, a manipulation th...

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Main Authors: Connolly, Terry, REB, Jochen Matthias
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2011
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/3322
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spelling sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-43212013-02-05T09:48:06Z Intuitive Politicians or Unintuitive Penitents? Regret Aversion, Accountability and Justification in the Decoy Effect Connolly, Terry REB, Jochen Matthias Several studies have shown that the decoy (or attraction) effect is amplified when participants anticipate having to justify their choices to an external audience. We report here two experiments examining the impact on the decoy effect of making future regret possibilities salient, a manipulation that has been shown in several earlier studies to generate pressure to examine and improve one's decision process. Experiment 1 showed that making regret salient eliminated the decoy effect in a personal preference task. Experiment 2 replicated this finding for a different personal preference task and for a prediction task. It also replicated previous findings that external accountability demands exacerbated the decoy effect. We interpret both effects in terms of justification demands, but to different audiences. Seeking justification to others (responding to accountability demands) exacerbated the decoy effect; seeking justification to oneself (responding to regret salience) eliminated it. The earlier 'intuitive politician' metaphor describes responses to demands for external justification. We propose here an alternative, the 'intuitive penitent', driven by thoughts of possible later regret to justify her choices to herself. These justification ideas both contribute to a theoretical account of the decoy effect and offer an effective debiasing procedure for it. 2011-08-25T07:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/3322 Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Organizational Behavior and Theory
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Organizational Behavior and Theory
spellingShingle Organizational Behavior and Theory
Connolly, Terry
REB, Jochen Matthias
Intuitive Politicians or Unintuitive Penitents? Regret Aversion, Accountability and Justification in the Decoy Effect
description Several studies have shown that the decoy (or attraction) effect is amplified when participants anticipate having to justify their choices to an external audience. We report here two experiments examining the impact on the decoy effect of making future regret possibilities salient, a manipulation that has been shown in several earlier studies to generate pressure to examine and improve one's decision process. Experiment 1 showed that making regret salient eliminated the decoy effect in a personal preference task. Experiment 2 replicated this finding for a different personal preference task and for a prediction task. It also replicated previous findings that external accountability demands exacerbated the decoy effect. We interpret both effects in terms of justification demands, but to different audiences. Seeking justification to others (responding to accountability demands) exacerbated the decoy effect; seeking justification to oneself (responding to regret salience) eliminated it. The earlier 'intuitive politician' metaphor describes responses to demands for external justification. We propose here an alternative, the 'intuitive penitent', driven by thoughts of possible later regret to justify her choices to herself. These justification ideas both contribute to a theoretical account of the decoy effect and offer an effective debiasing procedure for it.
format text
author Connolly, Terry
REB, Jochen Matthias
author_facet Connolly, Terry
REB, Jochen Matthias
author_sort Connolly, Terry
title Intuitive Politicians or Unintuitive Penitents? Regret Aversion, Accountability and Justification in the Decoy Effect
title_short Intuitive Politicians or Unintuitive Penitents? Regret Aversion, Accountability and Justification in the Decoy Effect
title_full Intuitive Politicians or Unintuitive Penitents? Regret Aversion, Accountability and Justification in the Decoy Effect
title_fullStr Intuitive Politicians or Unintuitive Penitents? Regret Aversion, Accountability and Justification in the Decoy Effect
title_full_unstemmed Intuitive Politicians or Unintuitive Penitents? Regret Aversion, Accountability and Justification in the Decoy Effect
title_sort intuitive politicians or unintuitive penitents? regret aversion, accountability and justification in the decoy effect
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2011
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/3322
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