Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
882590 Journal of Consumer Psychology 2006 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

The ease with which information comes to mind can impact judgment. We examine whether the influence of ease of retrieval is moderated by situational factors that call it to attention before judgment and by individual differences in experiential processing style, as measured by the rational experiential inventory scale (Pacini & Epstein, 1999). An ease of retrieval effect, indicated by less favorable evaluations of a proposal following the retrieval of many reasons advocating the proposal than following the retrieval of only a few, was found for high-experiential style processors regardless of situational factors that made ease of retrieval salient. However, the effect was found among low-experiential style processors only when ease of retrieval was explicitly called to their attention prior to judgment.

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