Harinck Fieke, Van Dijk Eric, Van Beest Ilja, Mersmann Paul
Social and Organizational Psychology, Leiden University-Institute of Psychological Research, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Psychol Sci. 2007 Dec;18(12):1099-105. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2007.02031.x.
Previous research has generally shown that people are loss averse; that is, they weigh losses more heavily than gains. In a series of three experiments, we found that for small outcomes, this pattern is reversed, and gains loom larger than losses. We explain this reversal on the basis of (a) the hedonic principle, which states that individuals are motivated to maximize pleasure and to minimize pain, and (b) the assumption that small losses are more easily discounted cognitively than large losses are.
先前的研究普遍表明,人们厌恶损失;也就是说,他们对损失的重视程度高于收益。在一系列三项实验中,我们发现,对于小的结果,这种模式会反转,收益显得比损失更大。我们基于以下两点来解释这种反转:(a)享乐主义原则,即个体被激励去最大化愉悦并最小化痛苦;(b)小损失比大损失在认知上更容易被忽视的假设。