Individual differences in fast-and-frugal decision making: Neuroticism and the recognition heuristic |
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Authors: | Benjamin E. Hilbig |
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Affiliation: | University of Mannheim, Center for Doctoral Studies in Social and Behavioral Sciences, D7 27, 68131 Mannheim, BW, Germany |
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Abstract: | The fast-and-frugal recognition heuristic (RH) claims that people base inferences on recognition only, thus ignoring further knowledge they possess. This claim has been repeatedly challenged, while recent evidence suggests that there are substantial individual differences in adhering to the RH. However, no personality or ability factors driving (non-)use of the RH have, as yet, been identified. In the present study, neuroticism was hypothesized to be a determinant of using the RH: participants high in neuroticism were expected to avoid making use of their knowledge beyond recognition, thus avoiding a diagnostic test of their abilities. The results corroborate this hypothesis: neuroticism predicted participants’ adherence to the RH while the other Big 5 factors and intelligence yielded no additional explanatory power. Moreover, the effect of neuroticism was not mediated by the accessibility of knowledge thus lending preliminary support for the notion that this effect may, in fact, be genuinely motivational in nature. |
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Keywords: | Decision making Individual differences Big 5 Neuroticism Intelligence Recognition heuristic Fast-and-frugal heuristics |
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