Johnson Eric J, Häubl Gerald, Keinan Anat
Columbia Business SchoolColumbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn. 2007 May;33(3):461-74. doi: 10.1037/0278-7393.33.3.461.
How do people judge the monetary value of objects? One clue is provided by the typical endowment study (D. Kahneman, J. L. Knetsch, & R. H. Thaler, 1991), in which participants are randomly given either a good, such as a coffee mug, that they may later sell ("sellers") or a choice between the good and amounts of cash ("choosers"). Sellers typically demand at least twice as much as choosers, inconsistent with economic theory. This result is usually explained by an increased weighting of losses, or loss aversion. The authors provide a memory-based account of endowment, suggesting that people construct values by posing a series of queries whose order differs for sellers and choosers. Because of output interference, these queries retrieve different aspects of the object and the medium of exchange, producing different valuations. The authors show that the content and structure of the recalled aspects differ for selling and choosing and that these aspects predict valuations. Merely altering the order in which queries are posed can eliminate the endowment effect, and changing the order of queries can produce endowment-like effects without ownership.
人们如何判断物品的货币价值?典型的禀赋研究(D. 卡尼曼、J. L. 克内施和R. H. 泰勒,1991年)提供了一条线索,在该研究中,参与者被随机给予一种物品,比如一个咖啡杯,他们之后可以出售(“卖家”),或者在该物品和一定金额的现金之间做出选择(“选择者”)。卖家通常索要的价格至少是选择者的两倍,这与经济理论不符。这一结果通常用损失权重的增加,即损失厌恶来解释。作者提供了一种基于记忆的禀赋解释,表明人们通过提出一系列问题来构建价值,这些问题的顺序对于卖家和选择者来说是不同的。由于输出干扰,这些问题检索出物品和交换媒介的不同方面,从而产生不同的估值。作者表明,回忆起来的方面的内容和结构在出售和选择时是不同的,并且这些方面可以预测估值。仅仅改变提问的顺序就可以消除禀赋效应,而改变问题的顺序可以在没有所有权的情况下产生类似禀赋的效应。