Comparing Is Believing: A Selective Accessibility Model of Judgmental Anchoring
- 1 January 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in European Review of Social Psychology
- Vol. 10 (1), 135-167
- https://doi.org/10.1080/14792779943000044
Abstract
Judgmental anchoring constitutes an ubiquitous and robust phenomenon. Nevertheless, its underlying mechanisms remain somewhat mysterious. We discuss four accounts that attempt to explain anchoring effects: insufficient adjustment, conversational inferences and numeric priming seem to be insufficient to understand the phenomenon. As an alternative, we propose a Selective Accessibility model. Drawing on the notions of hypothesis-consistent testing and semantic priming, the model assumes that anchoring effects are mediated by the selectively increased accessibility of anchor-consistent knowledge. Tests of the model's basic assumptions are reported and its implications are discussed.Keywords
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