第一印象还是美好结局?喜好取决于你何时询问。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
Alyssa H Sinclair,Yuxi C Wang,R Alison Adcock
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引用次数: 0

摘要

回报往往会随着时间的推移而逐渐显现;我们必须在记忆中对事件进行总结,以指导未来的选择。是第一印象最重要,还是以好的结局结束更好?通过九项研究(N = 569),我们对这些相互竞争的直觉进行了测试,结果发现,偏好取决于奖励发生的时间和要求我们评估体验的时间。在我们的 "车库拍卖 "任务中,参与者打开了装有一系列有价值物品的盒子。所有的盒子都同样有价值,但奖励要么均匀分布,要么集中在序列的开头、中间或结尾。首先,我们测试了学习后不久的偏好和估价;我们一致发现,奖励位于开头的盒子会受到强烈偏好并被高估。在有早期奖励的盒子中,物体价值联想记忆受损,这表明价值信息是与盒子而不是物体联系在一起的。然而,在经过一夜的延迟测试后,参与者同样偏好任何一组奖励的盒子,无论是在体验的开始、中间还是结尾。最后,我们还证明,在体验结束后不久进行评估会导致人们对早期奖励的持久偏好。总之,我们的研究表明,人们是以非线性和时间依赖的方式总结奖励体验的,这与之前有关情感、记忆和决策的研究成果是一致的。我们提出,短期偏好会受到第一印象的影响。然而,当我们等待并在延迟后评估一次经历时,我们会总结记忆中的奖励事件,为适应性的长期偏好提供信息。偏好取决于奖励发生的时间和我们首次评估体验的时间。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, 版权所有)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
First impressions or good endings? Preferences depend on when you ask.
Rewards often unfold over time; we must summarize events in memory to guide future choices. Do first impressions matter most, or is it better to end on a good note? Across nine studies (N = 569), we tested these competing intuitions and found that preferences depend on when rewards occur and when we are asked to evaluate an experience. In our "garage sale" task, participants opened boxes containing sequences of objects with values. All boxes were equally valuable, but rewards were either evenly distributed or clustered at the beginning, middle, or end of the sequence. First, we tested preferences and valuation shortly after learning; we consistently found that boxes with rewards at the beginning were strongly preferred and overvalued. Object-value associative memory was impaired in boxes with early rewards, suggesting that value information was linked to the box rather than the objects. However, when tested after an overnight delay, participants equally preferred boxes with any cluster of rewards, whether at the beginning, middle, or end of the experience. Finally, we demonstrated that evaluating shortly after an experience led to lasting preferences for early rewards. Overall, we show that people summarize rewarding experiences in a nonlinear and time-dependent way, unifying prior work on affect, memory, and decision making. We propose that short-term preferences are biased by first impressions. However, when we wait and evaluate an experience after a delay, we summarize rewarding events in memory to inform adaptive longer term preferences. Preferences depend on when rewards occur and when we first evaluate an experience. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
4.30%
发文量
567
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