Literature DB >> 28825874

The Love of Large Numbers: A Popularity Bias in Consumer Choice.

Derek Powell1, Jingqi Yu2, Melissa DeWolf3, Keith J Holyoak3.   

Abstract

Social learning-the ability to learn from observing the decisions of other people and the outcomes of those decisions-is fundamental to human evolutionary and cultural success. The Internet now provides social evidence on an unprecedented scale. However, properly utilizing this evidence requires a capacity for statistical inference. We examined how people's interpretation of online review scores is influenced by the numbers of reviews-a potential indicator both of an item's popularity and of the precision of the average review score. Our task was designed to pit statistical information against social information. We modeled the behavior of an "intuitive statistician" using empirical prior information from millions of reviews posted on Amazon.com and then compared the model's predictions with the behavior of experimental participants. Under certain conditions, people preferred a product with more reviews to one with fewer reviews even though the statistical model indicated that the latter was likely to be of higher quality than the former. Overall, participants' judgments suggested that they failed to make meaningful statistical inferences.

Entities:  

Keywords:  decision making; heuristics; open data; open materials; popularity; sample size

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28825874     DOI: 10.1177/0956797617711291

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Sci        ISSN: 0956-7976


  1 in total

1.  Metacognitive Myopia in Hidden-Profile Tasks: The Failure to Control for Repetition Biases.

Authors:  Klaus Fiedler; Joscha Hofferbert; Franz Wöllert
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2018-06-05
  1 in total

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