Title of article
Pricing decisions from experience: The roles of information-acquisition and response modes
Author/Authors
Golan، نويسنده , , Hagai and Ert، نويسنده , , Eyal، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2015
Pages
5
From page
9
To page
13
Abstract
While pricing decisions that are based on experience are quite common, e.g., setting a selling price for a used car, this type of decision has been surprisingly overlooked in psychology and decision research. Previous studies have focused on either choice decisions from experience, or pricing decisions from description. Those studies revealed that pricing involves cognitive mechanisms other than choice, while experience-based decisions involve mechanisms that differ from description-based ones. Thus, the mutual effect of pricing and experience on decision-making remains unclear. To test this effect, we experimentally compared real-money pricing decisions from experience with those from description, and with choices from experience. The results show that the mode of acquiring information affects pricing: the tendency to underprice high-probability prospects and overprice low-probability ones is diminished when pricing is based on experience rather than description. The findings further reveal attenuation of the tendency to underweight rare events, which underlies choices from experience, in pricing decisions from experience. The difference occurs because the response mode affects the search effort and decision strategy in decisions from experience.
Keywords
Description–experience gap , Preference reversal , Pricing , choice , Risk , Search
Journal title
Cognition
Serial Year
2015
Journal title
Cognition
Record number
2078323
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