The Role of Inference in Context Effects: Inferring What You Want from What Is Available.
It has recently been suggested that a number of experimental findings of context effects in choice settings can be explained by the ability of subjects to draw choice-relevant inferences from the stimuli. We aim to measure the importance of this explanation. To do so, inferences are assessed in an experiment using the basic context-effect design, supplemented by direct measures of inferred locations of available products on the price-quality Hotelling line. We use these measures to estimate a predicted context effect due to inference alone. For our stimuli, we find that the inference effect accounts for two-thirds of the average magnitude of the context effect and for about one-half of the cross-category context-effect variance. Copyright 1997 by the University of Chicago.
Year of publication: |
1997
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Authors: | Prelec, Drazen ; Wernerfelt, Birger ; Zettelmeyer, Florian |
Published in: |
Journal of Consumer Research. - University of Chicago Press. - Vol. 24.1997, 1, p. 118-25
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Publisher: |
University of Chicago Press |
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