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Sarah likes “Nifty” experiments. Paul S. and Sarah L. in 1969 Preference reversal studies. A new kind of preference reversal. Based on selective attention being at the core of preference construction processes Using attention manipulations to shape preferences (Peters, in preparation)
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Sarah likes “Nifty” experiments Paul S. and Sarah L. in 1969 Preference reversal studies
A new kind of preference reversal • Based on selective attention being at the core of preference construction processes • Using attention manipulations to shape preferences (Peters, in preparation) • A “mere looking” effect
Attention and the mental number line 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 89 2 Fischer, Castel, Dodd, & Pratt (2003)
Attention and the mental number line 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 89 8 Fischer, Castel, Dodd, & Pratt (2003)
Trial Sequence Initial display: 500 ms 9 Digit at fixation (1, 2, 8, 9): 300 ms Variable delay (50, 100, 200, 300, 400, or 500 ms) Peripheral target PRESS SPACE BAR
Perceiving Numbers Causes Spatial Shifts of Attention • Small number “1”: Faster to detect left than right • Large number “9”: Faster on the right than left • Involuntary activation of a mental number line with mere presence of integers • Interaction between the cognitive systems which control number recognition and visual attention • Creates a subtle shift of attention Fischer, Castel, Dodd, & Pratt (2003)
Might it matter for decision making? • Information accessed earlier, presented earlier, or chosen earlier by the subject appears to have a disproportionate influence on choices • Query Theory (Weber, Johnson, et al., 2007; Johnson, Haubl, & Keinan, 2007) • Information distortion (Russo et al., 2006; DeKay et al., 2009) • If numbers covertly shift attention, might the subsequent “mere look” at information influence decisions? Peters (in preparation)
Study 1: Method – point to your preferred product (real choice; N=44)
Numeric magnitudes shifted attention and biased choice % chose left-side eraser 2(df = 1) = 4.5, p = 0.03
Early attention to an option may have led to more positive evaluations • and therefore preferences of the early-attended object • A mere exposure effect; Zajonc, 1967
Study 2: Choosing a vacation spot (hypothetical choice; internet sample N=192)
When shown a “1”, information order on the right doesn’t matter % chose left-side Spot A interaction Wald 2(df = 1) = 9.1, p = 0.003
“Mere looking” appeared to bias choices based on processingthe first information attended % chose left-side Spot A interaction Wald 2(df = 1) = 9.1, p = 0.003
Using attention to shape processing: Analogy with figure-ground illusions (Tversky & Kahneman, 1981; Einhorn & Hogart, 1981)
Study 3: Description-framing effects (materials from McNeil, Pauker, Sox, & Tversky, 1982) Survival frame: Mortality frame:
Risk of death at treatment looms larger in mortality frame, and surgery is preferred less (McNeil et al., 1982). Survival frame: Mortality frame:
Study 3 methods • Used McNeil et al. materials • Internet sample (N=370) • 12 between-subjects conditions: • 2 description frame (survival/mortality) • X 2 order (radiation/surgery on the left) • X 3 Attention manipulation (‘1’, ‘9’, no integer) • McNeil et al. used the 2 description frames with radiation on the left and no integer • Expressed a preference from 1=“prefer radiation much more” to 6 = “Prefer surgery much more”
Risk of death at treatment looms larger in the mortality frame, and surgery is preferred more in the survival frame (McNeil et al., 1982). 6=prefer surgery 1=prefer radiation
But what if attention alters the “figure-ground”? And whatever is attended first becomes the reference point? Survival frame: Mortality frame:
What if attention alters the “figure-ground”?Attending to radiation first means: Survival frame: 100 compared to 90 and a negative attention frame: Mortality frame: 0 compared to 10 and a negative attention frame
Attention-frame explanation: Negative attention frame is induced, and “10” is perceived as bigger from 0 to 10 than from 100 to 90. 6=prefer surgery 1=prefer radiation
But people read from left to right, and radiation was always on the left. • Let’s try switching the order • What would an attention frame predict?
Surgery still preferred more in the 90-compared-to-100 frame, but this is a positive frame and the effect should be attenuated compared to the negative attention frame Now surgery is on the left Survival frame: 90 compared to 100 and a positive attention frame: Mortality frame: 10 compared to 0 and a positive attention frame
Attention-frame explanation: Reverse the order and the effect is attenuated. 6=prefer surgery 1=prefer radiation
What if you simply direct attention? Survival frame: Mortality frame:
Evidence of an attention frame creating and attenuating McNeil et al.’s results 6=prefer surgery 1=prefer radiation Attended to surgery first Attended to radiation first
Evidence of an attention frame creating and attenuating McNeil et al.’s results 6=prefer surgery 1=prefer radiation Attended to surgery first Attended to radiation first Attention X Description Frame, F(1,366)=12.8, p<.001 In Mortality description, Attention p<.001 In Survival description, Attention ns
Attention, “mere looking,” and the construction of preferences • Evidence for a new kind of preference reversal: Three studies • Real choices among identical erasers • Choices of an enriched vacation spot • Framing effects • Incidental shifts of attention can influence processing and framing of decision options • And, ultimately, the construction of preferences
Attention-frame explanation: Reverse the order and the effect is attenuated. 6=prefer surgery 1=prefer radiation
Evidence for incidental attention biasing choices • Activation of a mental number line from mere observation of numbers • This activation influenced, • Attention • AND • Processing of information contiguous with shift • AND • Valuation and choice • Information attended first was processed and had a disproportionate influence on choice
Bounded rationality and the construction of preferences Lichtenstein, S., & Slovic, P. (Eds.)The Construction of Preference. New York: Cambridge University Press.
In the positive-attention frame, first numbers may not discriminate, and decision makers may process further. Survival frame: Mortality frame:
With radiation on the left and a negative attention frame: Number comparisons in the two description frames are always 10 but occur at different points on the number line. And “0 to 10” is a bigger 10 than is “100 to 90” so therefore surgery should be preferred more in survival frame, as McNeil et al. found and I found. Survival frame: Mortality frame:
Studies on framing effects in lung cancer Of 100 people Of 100 people havingradiation: having surgery: Survival Frame all survive tx 90 survive tx 77 survive >1 yr 68 survive > 1 yr 22 survive >5 yr 34 survive >5 yr Mortality Frame none die in tx 10 die in tx 23 die by 1 yr 32 die by 1 yr 78 die by 5 yr 66 die by 5 yr (McNeil, Pauker, Sox, & Tversky, 1982)
Losses loom large, and surgery is less attractive in mortality frame than survival frame % chose Surgery (McNeil, Pauker, Sox, & Tversky, 1982)
Attention matters Change option order Direct attention
Attention matters Attn directed to radiation Attn directed to surgery
Attention matters Attention directed to surgery Attn directed to radiation