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<<.... In 2006, J. Edward Russo, a psychologist specializing in decision making at Cornell's Johnson Graduate School of Management, ran a series of experiments to illustrate just how easy it would be to get us to go against our own best interest with just a bit of clever framing. First, he and his colleagues asked a group of students about their restaurant preferences for two pairs of fictional restaurants that were described according to ten different attributes (atmosphere, daily specials, driving distance, speed of service, and the like). Two weeks later, they asked everyone to come in for a follow-up. This time, the list of attributes was modified and ordered in a very specific way. The information was identical, but now the characteristic that most favored the inferior restaurant was placed first -- and the less favorable last. Everyone was next asked to rate the restaurants a second time, and then to say how confident they were of their choices on a scale of zero (uncertain) to one-hundred (completely certain), where fifty represents a toss-up.
This time around, a majority of people -- 62 percent -- favored the previously inferior choices. The fact that the first attribute supported it skewed all subsequent information. In fact, after the first attribute alone, a full 76 percent said the inferior choice was the leader. What's more, they had no idea they were doing it. People were choosing a restaurant they would not have naturally liked nearly as much as other options, but they remained equally confident in their choice no matter what option they'd picked.>>
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* Source: "The Confidence Game" by Maria Konnikova (Viking Press, 2016).
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This time around, a majority of people -- 62 percent -- favored the previously inferior choices. The fact that the first attribute supported it skewed all subsequent information. In fact, after the first attribute alone, a full 76 percent said the inferior choice was the leader. What's more, they had no idea they were doing it. People were choosing a restaurant they would not have naturally liked nearly as much as other options, but they remained equally confident in their choice no matter what option they'd picked.>>
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* Source: "The Confidence Game" by Maria Konnikova (Viking Press, 2016).
~~ Page 160 ~~