System 1 Is Not Scope Insensitive: A New, Dual-Process Account of Subjective Value

Dan R. Schley, Bart De Langhe, Andrew R. Long

    Producció científica: Article en revista indexadaArticleAvaluat per experts

    18 Cites (Scopus)

    Resum

    Companies can create value by differentiating their products and services along quantitative attributes. Existing research suggests that consumers' tendency to rely on relatively effortless and affect-based processes reduces their sensitivity to the scope of quantitative attributes and that this explains why increments along quantitative attributes often have diminishing marginal value. The current article sheds new light on how "system 1"processes moderate the effect of quantitative product attributes on subjective value. Seven studies provide evidence that system 1 processes can produce diminishing marginal value, but also increasing marginal value, or any combination of the two, depending on the composition of the choice set. This is because system 1 processes facilitate ordinal comparisons (e.g., 256 GB is more than 128 GB, which is more than 64 GB) while system 2 processes, which are relatively more effortful and calculation based, facilitate cardinal comparisons (e.g., the difference between 256 and 128 GB is twice as large as between 128 and 64 GB).

    Idioma originalAnglès
    Pàgines (de-a)566-587
    Nombre de pàgines22
    RevistaJournal of Consumer Research
    Volum47
    Número4
    DOIs
    Estat de la publicacióPublicada - 1 de des. 2020

    Fingerprint

    Navegar pels temes de recerca de 'System 1 Is Not Scope Insensitive: A New, Dual-Process Account of Subjective Value'. Junts formen un fingerprint únic.

    Com citar-ho