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We define transactions as weird when they include unexplained features, that is, features not implicitly, explicitly, or self-evidently justified, and propose that people are averse to weird transactions. In six experiments, we show that risky options used in previous research paradigms often...
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Why have companies faced a backlash for running experiments? Academics and pundits have argued people find corporate experimentation intrinsically objectionable. Here we investigate “experiment aversion,” finding evidence that, if anything, experiments are more acceptable than the worst...
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How do we combine others' probability forecasts? Prior research has shown that when advisors provide numeric probability forecasts, people typically average them (i.e., they move closer to the average advisor's forecast). However, what if the advisors say that an event is “likely” or...
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In this chapter, we review and synthesize past research on want/should conflict. We begin with a formal definition of relative wants and shoulds and summarize prior work on the underlying cognitive processes that produce want/should conflict. We then describe empirical research on the levers...
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