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From individual preference construction to group decisions: Framing effects and group processes
Authors:Kerry F. Milch   Elke U. Weber   Kirstin C. Appelt   Michel J.J. Handgraaf  David H. Krantz
Affiliation:aDepartment of Psychology, Columbia University, 1190 Amsterdam Avenue, MC 5501, New York, NY 10027, United States;bDepartment of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Abstract:Two choice tasks known to produce framing effects in individual decisions were used to test group sensitivity to framing, relative to that of individuals, and to examine the effect of prior, individual consideration of a decision on group choice. Written post-decision reasons and pre-decision group discussions were analyzed to investigate process explanations of choices made by preexisting, naturalistic groups. For a risky choice problem, a similar framing effect was observed for groups and individuals. For an intertemporal choice task where consumption was either delayed or accelerated, naïve groups (whose members had not preconsidered the decision) showed a framing effect, less discounting in the delay frame, opposite to that observed in individuals. Predecided groups showed a non-significant effect in the other, expected direction. In all cases, process measures better explained variability in choices across conditions than frame alone. Implications for group decision research and design considerations for committee decisions are addressed.
Keywords:Decision making   Framing   Group processes   Group performance
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