Valerie F Reyna, Jordan E Roue, Sarah M Edelson, Aadya Singh, M G Fennema
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We administered classic dread-disease framing, business framing, and Allais paradox problems and the CRT. Each participant received a gain and loss framing problem from different domains (one disease and one business), with presentation order counterbalanced across participants. Order of Allais problems was counterbalanced within participants. Within-participants (cross-domain) framing, between-participants (within-domain) framing, and the Allais paradox were observed for both samples. Accountants did not show domain-specific attenuation (differentially smaller framing) for business problems. Despite large expected-value differences between Allais problem options, accountants' choices resembled students' choices. Contrary to dual-process theories, CRT scores were positively related to framing for students (more framing with higher CRT) and inconsistently related for accountants, but high scorers had robust framing effects; high scorers also showed the Allais paradox. Results are consistent with fuzzy-trace theory's expectation that experts show framing effects because they rely primarily on gist-based intuition, not because they lack numeracy or cognitive reflection. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
框架效应(收益vs损失的风险偏好反转)和阿莱悖论(选择确定vs不确定的风险偏好反转)是对理性选择理论的重大违背。与典型样本相比,有能力处理概率和期望值的注册会计师应该是理性选择的理想测试案例,尤其是在认知反射测试(CRT)中获得高分的人。虽然双过程理论强调计算能力和认知反射,但模糊痕迹理论强调基于清单的直觉来解释认知高级决策者之间的这些影响。因此,我们招募了一个高计算能力的注册会计师(N = 259)和学生(N = 648)的样本。我们使用了经典的恐惧-疾病框架,商业框架,阿莱悖论问题和CRT。每个参与者都收到了来自不同领域(一种疾病和一种业务)的收益和损失框架问题,并在参与者之间平衡了演示顺序。阿莱问题的顺序在参与者中得到了平衡。在两个样本中观察到参与者内(跨域)框架,参与者之间(域内)框架和Allais悖论。会计师对业务问题没有表现出特定领域的衰减(差异较小的框架)。尽管阿莱问题选项之间存在巨大的期望值差异,但会计人员的选择与学生的选择相似。与双过程理论相反,CRT分数对学生的框架有正相关(CRT越高,框架越多),对会计人员的框架效应不一致,但高分者的框架效应强;高分者也显示了阿莱悖论。结果与模糊痕迹理论的预期一致,即专家表现出框架效应是因为他们主要依赖于基于清单的直觉,而不是因为他们缺乏计算能力或认知反射。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA,版权所有)。
High in numeracy, high in reflection, but still irrationally biased: How gist explains risky choices.
Framing effects (risk preferences reverse for gains vs. losses) and the Allais paradox (risk preferences reverse when an option is certain vs. not) are major violations of rational choice theory. In contrast to typical samples, certified public accountants who are competent in working with probabilities and expected values should be an ideal test case for rational choice, especially high scorers on the cognitive reflection test (CRT). Although dual-process theories emphasize numeracy and cognitive reflection, fuzzy-trace theory emphasizes gist-based intuition to explain these effects among cognitively advanced decision-makers. Thus, we recruited a high-numeracy sample of certified public accountants (N = 259) and students (N = 648). We administered classic dread-disease framing, business framing, and Allais paradox problems and the CRT. Each participant received a gain and loss framing problem from different domains (one disease and one business), with presentation order counterbalanced across participants. Order of Allais problems was counterbalanced within participants. Within-participants (cross-domain) framing, between-participants (within-domain) framing, and the Allais paradox were observed for both samples. Accountants did not show domain-specific attenuation (differentially smaller framing) for business problems. Despite large expected-value differences between Allais problem options, accountants' choices resembled students' choices. Contrary to dual-process theories, CRT scores were positively related to framing for students (more framing with higher CRT) and inconsistently related for accountants, but high scorers had robust framing effects; high scorers also showed the Allais paradox. Results are consistent with fuzzy-trace theory's expectation that experts show framing effects because they rely primarily on gist-based intuition, not because they lack numeracy or cognitive reflection. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition publishes studies on perception, control of action, perceptual aspects of language processing, and related cognitive processes.