Publication details

How Irrelevant Alternatives Influence Choices: Cognitive Reflection Related to Decoy Effect

Authors

ĎURINÍK Michal

Year of publication 2016
Type Conference abstract
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Economics and Administration

Citation
Description An alternative that nobody finds attractive: how can it change our decisions? Violating the Independence from Irrelevant Alternatives axiom, decoy options included in choice sets may induce preference shifts. As noted by Pettibone and Wedell (2000), a person may be indifferent between A and B in pairwise choice, but she may strongly prefer A over B in a trinary choice that also includes decoy. Two types of decoys can be constructed: Dominated (D) decoy, that is inferior to A, and Nearly Dominated (ND) decoy, that is significantly worse than A in one attribute and only slightly better than A in the other attribute. This experiment investigates the conjecture of Dhar and Gorlin (2013) that D-decoys and ND-decoys operate within different processes: D-decoy utilizing System 1 and ND-decoy utilizing System 2. Employing Cognitive Reflection Test I find the degree of System 1 / System 2 engagement to predict D-decoy performance significantly (the higher System 2 engagement, the lower decoy success rate). I observe no such relation for ND-decoy performance, though. This suggests that D and ND decoys do, as hypothesized, operate within different cognitive processes.
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