高估他人的价值和偏好

Minah H. Jung, Alice Moon, Leif D. Nelson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

人们经常对自己和他人的价值和偏好做出判断。在12项研究中(N=18,818),我们发现在这些判断中存在强烈的偏见,例如人们高估了他人的估值和偏好。之所以会出现这种高估,是因为在对他人做出预测时,人们依赖于他们对经验的直觉核心表征(例如,经验是否普遍积极?),而不是更复杂的表征,可能还包括相反的方面(例如,是否有消极的经验?)。我们首先证明,高估偏差在广泛的积极体验(研究1-5)和消极体验(研究6)中普遍存在。此外,这种偏差不仅仅是衡量偏好的人为因素(研究7)。与基于核心表征的判断一致,当核心表征一致为积极时,这种偏差显著减少(研究8A-8B)。这样的判断导致了人们如何看待他人在价值和效用之间权衡的悖论(研究9A-9B)。具体来说,相对于自己而言,人们相信同样花钱的人会从同样的体验中获得更多的乐趣,但矛盾的是,同样享受的人会为同样的体验支付更多的钱。最后,与核心表征解释一致,明确提示人们考虑他人偏好的整体分布显著减少或消除了偏见(研究10)。这些发现表明,社会对他人偏好的判断不仅在很大程度上存在偏见,而且还忽略了他人如何在评估指标之间进行权衡。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Overestimating the Valuations and Preferences of Others
People often make judgments about their own and others’ valuations and preferences. Across 12 studies (N=18,818), we find a robust bias in these judgments such that people overestimate the valuations and preferences of others. This overestimation arises because, when making predictions about others, people rely on their intuitive core representation of the experience (e.g., is the experience generally positive?) in lieu of a more complex representation that might also include countervailing aspects (e.g., is any of the experience negative?). We first demonstrate that the overestimation bias is pervasive for a wide range of positive (Studies 1-5) and negative experiences (Study 6). Furthermore, the bias is not merely an artifact of how preferences are measured (Study 7). Consistent with judgments based on core representations, the bias significantly reduces when the core representation is uniformly positive (Studies 8A-8B). Such judgments lead to a paradox in how people see others trade off between valuation and utility (Studies 9A-9B). Specifically, relative to themselves, people believe that an identically-paying other will get more enjoyment from the same experience, but paradoxically, that an identically-enjoying other will pay more for the same experience. Finally, consistent with a core representation explanation, explicitly prompting people to consider the entire distribution of others’ preferences significantly reduced or eliminated the bias (Study 10). These findings suggest that social judgments of others’ preferences are not only largely biased, but they also ignore how others make tradeoffs between evaluative metrics.
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