Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/69973
Type: Conference paper
Title: Individual differences in anchoring: Numerical ability, education and experience
Author: Welsh, M.
Delfabbro, P.
Burns, N.
Begg, S.
Citation: Proceedings of the 33rd Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society (CogSci 2011), held in Boston, USA 20-32 July 2011 / L. Carlson, C. Hoelscher and T. Shipley (eds.): pp.3193-3198
Publisher: Cognitive Science Society
Publisher Place: online
Issue Date: 2011
ISBN: 9780976831877
Conference Name: Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society (33rd : 2011 : Boston, USA)
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Matthew B. Welsh, Paul Delfabbro, Nicholas R. Burns and Steve H. Begg
Abstract: Anchoring is a well-known effect leading to bias in estimation in various decision-making contexts. A question, however, is whether individuals with greater numerical and academic ability would be less prone to this effect than others because of greater ability to discern the value being estimated. In light of growing interest in the role of individual differences in bias susceptibility, anchoring was examined in a simulated poker-like card game, using people with varying levels of academic achievement and psychometric reasoning scores. The results showed that anchoring susceptibility was unrelated to education levels, but negatively associated with numerical reasoning and cognitive reflection scores. This result, however, was mediated by task expertise because participants with higher cognitive abilities were those more likely to display improvements in anchoring performance over the course of the experiment.
Keywords: anchoring
individual differences
numerical ability
experience
Rights: © the authors
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest
Australian School of Petroleum publications

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