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Knowledge does not necessarily make the heart grow fonder: The moderating role of knowledge on accessibility experiences
Authors:Jayati Sinha  Dhananjay Naykankuppam
Affiliation:1. Eller College of Management , 320Y McClelland Hall , University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721-0108, USA;2. Tippie College of Business, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA
Abstract:Accessibility experiences have been a subject of interest since Tversky and Kahneman (1973) published their account of the availability heuristic—specifically, individuals often utilize the phenomenological experience of ease or difficulty of recall in constructing a judgment (Schwarz, 1998). The reported studies contribute further to work in this area by examining the moderating role of knowledge on accessibility experiences and their use in evaluative judgments. We argue that knowledgeable individuals are more likely to experience interference effects in early stages of recall. This would result in a reversal of the usual phenomenon such that while low knowledge individuals would find recalling larger sets effortful, which would lead them to form more negative evaluations when recalling larger amounts of information, high knowledge individuals would find recalling smaller sets effortful and would form more negative evaluations when recalling smaller amounts of information. We discuss potential explanations and draw attention to the distinction between generating a response and the appropriateness of the response in accessibility experiences.
Keywords:Availability heuristic  Ease of recall  Accessibility experiences  Knowledge
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