Save
...
Reliability of cognitive processes
Biases in thinking and decision-making
Tversky and Kahneman (1974)
Save
Share
Learn
Content
Leaderboard
Share
Learn
Created by
Sukaina Mustaf
Visit profile
Cards (7)
Aim:
To demonstrate the effect of
anchoring bias
on
numerical estimations.
Participants:
High school
students
Procedure:
Two
conditions:
ascending
and
descending
Ascending group:
Estimate 1
x
2
x
3
x
4
x
5
x
6
x
7
x
8
in
5
seconds
Descending group:
Estimate 8
x
7
x
6
x
5
x
4
x
3
x
2
x
1
in
5 seconds
Results:
Ascending group median:
512
Descending group median:
2250
Actual value:
40320
Conclusion:
The first number seen (
anchor
) biased the
estimates
, with the
descending
group giving
higher
estimates than the
ascending
group.
Strengths:
Simplicity
and
replicability
: Easy to
replicate
, enhancing
reliability.
Internal validity
:
High
control allows for
causal inferences
about
anchoring
effects.
Use of
median
: Reduces the impact of
outliers
on
results.
Demonstrates
clear
effect: Shows a
strong
anchoring effect with a simple
manipulation.
Limitations:
Ecological
validity:
Artificial
task may not reflect
real-world
decision-making.
Time
constraint:
5-second
limit may not reflect
typical
decision-making conditions.
Sample
: Use of high school students limits
generalizability.
Independent
samples design: Participant variability could influence results.
Limited
scope: Focuses on
one specific type
of
anchoring
(numerical).