Post-decision consolidation and distortion of facts
(2009) In Judgment and Decision Making 4(5). p.397-407- Abstract
- Participants decided whom of two patients to prioritize for surgery in three studies. The factual quantitative information about the patients (e.g., probability of surviving surgery) was given in vignette form with case descriptions on Visual Analogue Scales - VAS's. Differentiation and Consolidation theory predicts that not only the attractiveness of facts but also the mental representations of objective facts themselves will be restructured in post-decision processes in support of a decision (Svenson, 2003). After the decision, participants were asked to reproduce the objective facts about the patients. The results showed that distortions of objective facts were used to consolidate a prior decision. The consolidation process relied on... (More)
- Participants decided whom of two patients to prioritize for surgery in three studies. The factual quantitative information about the patients (e.g., probability of surviving surgery) was given in vignette form with case descriptions on Visual Analogue Scales - VAS's. Differentiation and Consolidation theory predicts that not only the attractiveness of facts but also the mental representations of objective facts themselves will be restructured in post-decision processes in support of a decision (Svenson, 2003). After the decision, participants were asked to reproduce the objective facts about the patients. The results showed that distortions of objective facts were used to consolidate a prior decision. The consolidation process relied on facts initially favoring the non-chosen alternative and on facts rated as less, rather than more important. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1476213
- author
- Svenson, Ola ; Salo, Ilkka LU and Lindholm, Torun
- organization
- publishing date
- 2009
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- differentiation and consolidation, coherence, medical decisions, cognitive psychology, decision making
- in
- Judgment and Decision Making
- volume
- 4
- issue
- 5
- pages
- 397 - 407
- publisher
- Society for Judgment and Decision Making
- external identifiers
-
- wos:000269290200006
- scopus:70350164636
- ISSN
- 1930-2975
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 8fcb0b37-7535-46c3-81d8-0ed163dad355 (old id 1476213)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 13:42:47
- date last changed
- 2022-01-27 20:37:20
@article{8fcb0b37-7535-46c3-81d8-0ed163dad355, abstract = {{Participants decided whom of two patients to prioritize for surgery in three studies. The factual quantitative information about the patients (e.g., probability of surviving surgery) was given in vignette form with case descriptions on Visual Analogue Scales - VAS's. Differentiation and Consolidation theory predicts that not only the attractiveness of facts but also the mental representations of objective facts themselves will be restructured in post-decision processes in support of a decision (Svenson, 2003). After the decision, participants were asked to reproduce the objective facts about the patients. The results showed that distortions of objective facts were used to consolidate a prior decision. The consolidation process relied on facts initially favoring the non-chosen alternative and on facts rated as less, rather than more important.}}, author = {{Svenson, Ola and Salo, Ilkka and Lindholm, Torun}}, issn = {{1930-2975}}, keywords = {{differentiation and consolidation; coherence; medical decisions; cognitive psychology; decision making}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{5}}, pages = {{397--407}}, publisher = {{Society for Judgment and Decision Making}}, series = {{Judgment and Decision Making}}, title = {{Post-decision consolidation and distortion of facts}}, volume = {{4}}, year = {{2009}}, }