Fleeting Impressions of Economic Value via Summary Statistical Representations

Visual processing is limited: we cannot exhaustively analyze every object in a scene in a brief glance. However, ensemble perception affords the visual system a rapid shortcut to efficiently evaluate multiple objects. Ensemble processing has been widely tested across basic features. However, ensembl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental psychology. General 2020-10, Vol.149 (10), p.1811-1822
Hauptverfasser: Yamanashi Leib, Allison, Chang, Kelly, Xia, Ye, Peng, Andy, Whitney, David
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container_issue 10
container_start_page 1811
container_title Journal of experimental psychology. General
container_volume 149
creator Yamanashi Leib, Allison
Chang, Kelly
Xia, Ye
Peng, Andy
Whitney, David
description Visual processing is limited: we cannot exhaustively analyze every object in a scene in a brief glance. However, ensemble perception affords the visual system a rapid shortcut to efficiently evaluate multiple objects. Ensemble processing has been widely tested across basic features. However, ensemble perception could be especially important and valuable for processes that are normally thought to require cognitive deliberative effort. One typical high-level cognitive process that humans engage in frequently is evaluating the value of objects. Here, we presented brief displays of consumer products to human observers and measured their visual sensitivity to the average value of the sets. We found that participants were sensitive to the average value of sets of products even when they did not have explicit memory for every item in the display. Our results show that value judgments can be based on ensemble information. Although value is thought to be an inferential concept, ensemble processing affords the brain a heuristic to efficiently assign value to entire sets of objects.
doi_str_mv 10.1037/xge0000745
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subjects Adult
Cognitive ability
Cognitive Processes
Consumer Behavior
Costs and Cost Analysis
Economics
Explicit Memory
Female
Heuristic
Heuristics
Human
Humans
Judgment
Male
Memory
Middle Aged
Photic Stimulation
Statistics
Test Construction
Vision
Visual Perception
Young Adult
title Fleeting Impressions of Economic Value via Summary Statistical Representations
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