What Were They Thinking? Reducing Sunk-Cost Bias in a Life-Span Sample

We tested interventions to reduce "sunk-cost bias," the tendency to continue investing in failing plans even when those plans have soured and are no longer rewarding. We showed members of a national U.S. life-span panel a hypothetical scenario about a failing plan that was halfway complete...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychology and aging 2016-11, Vol.31 (7), p.724-736
Hauptverfasser: Strough, JoNell, Bruine de Bruin, Wändi, Parker, Andrew M, Karns, Tara, Lemaster, Philip, Pichayayothin, Nipat, Delaney, Rebecca, Stoiko, Rachel
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container_end_page 736
container_issue 7
container_start_page 724
container_title Psychology and aging
container_volume 31
creator Strough, JoNell
Bruine de Bruin, Wändi
Parker, Andrew M
Karns, Tara
Lemaster, Philip
Pichayayothin, Nipat
Delaney, Rebecca
Stoiko, Rachel
description We tested interventions to reduce "sunk-cost bias," the tendency to continue investing in failing plans even when those plans have soured and are no longer rewarding. We showed members of a national U.S. life-span panel a hypothetical scenario about a failing plan that was halfway complete. Participants were randomly assigned to an intervention to focus on how to improve the situation, an intervention to focus on thoughts and feelings, or a no-intervention control group. First, we found that the thoughts and feelings intervention reduced sunk-cost bias in decisions about project completion, as compared to the improvement intervention and the no-intervention control. Second, older age was associated with greater willingness to cancel the failing plan across all 3 groups. Third, we found that introspection processes helped to explain the effectiveness of the interventions. Specifically, the larger reduction in sunk-cost bias as observed in the thoughts and feelings intervention (vs. the improvement intervention) was associated with suppression of future-oriented thoughts of eventual success, and with suppression of augmentations of the scenario that could make it seem reasonable to continue the plan. Fourth, we found that introspection processes were related to age differences in decisions. Older people were less likely to mention future-oriented thoughts of eventual success associated with greater willingness to continue the failing plan. We discuss factors to consider when designing interventions for reducing sunk-cost bias.
doi_str_mv 10.1037/pag0000130
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Age Differences
Age Factors
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Aging
Aging - psychology
Bias
Cognitive Bias
Decision Making
Emotions
Failure
Female
Future
Goal setting
Human
Humans
Hypotheses
Intervention
Introspection
Life Span
Male
Middle Aged
Older people
Suppression
Young Adult
title What Were They Thinking? Reducing Sunk-Cost Bias in a Life-Span Sample
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