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Of great art and untalented artists: Effort information and the flexible construction of judgmental heuristics

✍ Scribed by Hyejeung Cho; Norbert Schwarz


Book ID
104021107
Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
195 KB
Volume
18
Category
Article
ISSN
1057-7408

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Past research (Kruger, Wirtz, Van Boven, & Altermatt, 2004) proposed that people use the effort of the producer as a heuristic for the quality of the product. In contrast, two experiments show that consumers' inferences from effort information are highly malleable. Participants were either explicitly exposed to one of two applicable naive theories (“good‐art‐takes‐effort” vs. “good‐art‐takes‐talent”) or the order of judgment was reversed (quality judgment first vs. talent judgment first) to activate different naive theories more subtly. In both cases, participants only inferred high quality from high effort when an “effort” theory was rendered accessible, but not when a “talent” theory was rendered accessible. We conclude that judgment tasks prime naive theories that can serve as inference rules, illustrating that heuristics can be constructed on the spot.