Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
888743 Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 2012 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

People tend to distort their evaluation of decision-relevant information in favor of the currently preferred alternative. We test whether this predecisional distortion of information is amplified by increased commitment to that current preference. We manipulated commitment, without changing the preferred option’s content, by requiring participants to indicate their preference either by circling or by darkening a sizable box (cf. feature-positive effect). Experiment 1 revealed that the effort to darken substantially increased predecisional distortion. Experiment 2 ruled out elaboration as an explanation for the effect of darkening. Experiment 3 showed that, among participants who attributed the darkening effort to an external source, predecisional distortion decreased when the source was believed to summon effort. These findings suggest that the developing commitment to a tentatively preferred alternative is one driver of predecisional distortion.

► Indicating a preference by darkening a box increased the extent that new information is distorted to favor the preference. ► This effect occurs below people’s conscious awareness (i.e., automatically). ► The act of darkening causes greater commitment and can be (mis)used to manipulate people’s preferences.

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