Abstract

A series of 7 experiments found that people defer important decisions more than unimportant decisions, and that this is independent of choice set composition. This finding persists even when deferral does not provide more flexibility (Experiment 2), when deferral has potential disadvantages (Experiment 3), and when deferral has no material benefits and is financially costly (Experiment 4). The effect of importance on deferral was independent of potential choice conflict (Experiment 5 & 6). The only exception was a situation in which one alternative was clearly dominant; here decision importance did not affect the likelihood of deferral (Experiment 7). These results suggest that people use decision importance as a cue for deferral: more important decisions should take more time and effort.

Details

Title
Decision importance as a cue for deferral
Author
Krijnen, Job M T; Zeelenberg, Marcel; Breugelmans, Seger M
Pages
407-415
Publication year
2015
Publication date
Sep 2015
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
ISSN
19302975
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1718815340
Copyright
Copyright Society for Judgment & Decision Making Sep 2015