Resum
Abundant experimental research has documented that incidental primes and emotions are capable of influencing people's judgments and choices. This paper examines whether the influence of such incidental factors is large enough to be observable in the field, by analyzing 682 actual university admission decisions. As predicted, applicants' academic attributes are weighted more heavily on cloudier days and non-academic attributes on sunnier days. The documented effects are of both statistical and practical significance: changes in cloud cover can increase a candidate's predicted probability of admission by an average of up to 11.9%. These results also shed light on the causes behind the long demonstrated unreliability of experts making repeated judgments from the same data.
Idioma original | Anglès |
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Pàgines (de-a) | 143-152 |
Nombre de pàgines | 10 |
Revista | Journal of Behavioral Decision Making |
Volum | 20 |
Número | 2 |
DOIs | |
Estat de la publicació | Publicada - d’abr. 2007 |
Publicat externament | Sí |