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Relatively fast! Efficiency advantages of comparative thinking

Authors :
Mussweiler, Thomas
Epstude, Kai
Source :
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General. Feb, 2009, Vol. 138 Issue 1, p1, 21 p.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Comparisons are a ubiquitous process in information processing. Seven studies examine whether, how, and when comparative thinking increases the efficiency of judgment and choice. Studies 1-4 demonstrate that procedurally priming participants to engage in more vs. less comparison influences how they process information about a target. Specifically, they retrieve less information about the target (Studies 1A, 1B), think more about an information-rich standard (Study 2) about which they activate judgment-relevant information (Study 3), and use this information to compensate for missing target information (Study 4). Studies 2-5 demonstrate the ensuing efficiency advantages. Participants who are primed on comparative thinking are faster in making a target judgment (Studies 2A, 2B, 4, 5) and have more residual processing capacities for a secondary task (Study 5). Studies 6 and 7 establish two boundary conditions by demonstrating that comparative thinking holds efficiency advantages only if target and standard are partly characterized by alignable features (Study 6) that are difficult to evaluate in isolation (Study 7). These findings indicate that comparative thinking may often constitute a useful mechanism to simplify information processing. Keywords: comparison, efficiency, thinking styles, procedural priming

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00963445
Volume :
138
Issue :
1
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.193756010