The transience of constructed preferences |
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Authors: | Dan Simon Daniel C Krawczyk Airom Bleicher Keith J Holyoak |
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Institution: | 1. University of Southern California, California, USA;2. University of Texas at Dallas and University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, Texas, USA;3. University of California, Los Angeles, California, USA |
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Abstract: | A large body of research suggests that preferences are constructed rather than merely accessed in the course of making decisions. The current research examines the stability of constructed preferences over time. Preferences for various factors relevant to a job choice were measured prior to presentation of the job‐choice task, at the point of decision, and again following a delay. It was found that relative to baseline pre‐decision levels, preferences shifted to provide stronger support for the emerging decision. Preference changes proved to be transient, receding to baseline after 1 week (Experiment 1), and even within 15 minutes (Experiment 2). These findings, which can be interpreted in terms of decision‐making by constraint satisfaction, suggest that preferences are constructed to serve the decision at hand, without constraining the decision maker in future decisions. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
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Keywords: | decision making constructed preferences constraint satisfaction time and decision making regret decisional conflict |
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