» Articles » PMID: 10433900

Anchoring, Activation, and the Construction of Values

Overview
Specialty Psychology
Date 1999 Aug 6
PMID 10433900
Citations 20
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Anchoring is a pervasive judgment bias in which decision makers are systematically influenced by random and uninformative starting points. While anchors have been shown to affect a broad range of judgments including answers to knowledge questions, monetary evaluations, and social judgments, the underlying causes of anchoring have been explored only recently. We suggest that anchors affect judgments by increasing the availability and construction of features that the anchor and target hold in common and reducing the availability of features of the target that differ from the anchor. We test this notion of anchoring as activation in five experiments that examine the effects of several experimental manipulations on judgments of value and belief as well as on measures of cognitive processes. Our results indicate that prompting subjects to consider features of the item that are different from the anchor reduces anchoring, while increasing consideration of similar features has no effect. The anchoring-as-activation approach provides a mechanism for debiasing anchoring and also points to a common mechanism underlying anchoring and a number of other judgment phenomena. Copyright 1999 Academic Press.

Citing Articles

The Anchoring Effect in Study Time Allocation: Labor-in-Vain versus Labor-and-Gain.

Li X, Xu H, Chu Y, Tang W, Liu X Behav Sci (Basel). 2024; 14(7).

PMID: 39062390 PMC: 11273422. DOI: 10.3390/bs14070567.


The power of past performance in multidimensional supplier evaluation and supplier selection: Debiasing anchoring bias and its knock-on effects.

Wong R PLoS One. 2024; 19(5):e0303700.

PMID: 38753643 PMC: 11098414. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0303700.


Communicating risk: How relevant and irrelevant probabilistic information influences risk perception in medical decision-making.

Hayakawa S, Marian V Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci. 2022; 23(3):678-690.

PMID: 36539559 PMC: 9767802. DOI: 10.3758/s13415-022-01053-5.


What Influences People's Tradeoff Decisions Between CO Emissions and Travel Time? An Experiment With Anchors and Normative Messages.

Andersson H, Ahonen-Jonnarth U, Holmgren M, Marsh J, Wallhagen M, Bokman F Front Psychol. 2021; 12:702398.

PMID: 34955942 PMC: 8699112. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.702398.


The effect of anchors and social information on behaviour.

OGarra T, Sisco M PLoS One. 2020; 15(4):e0231203.

PMID: 32287302 PMC: 7156041. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0231203.