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Sequential biases on subjective judgments: Evidence from face attractiveness and ringtone agreeableness judgment

When people make decisions about sequentially presented items in psychophysical experiments, their decisions are always biased by their preceding decisions and the preceding items, either by assimilation (shift towards the decision or item) or contrast (shift away from the decision or item). Such se...

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Autores principales: Huang, Jianrui, He, Xianyou, Ma, Xiaojin, Ren, Yian, Zhao, Tingting, Zeng, Xin, Li, Han, Chen, Yiheng
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5995378/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29889850
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0198723
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author Huang, Jianrui
He, Xianyou
Ma, Xiaojin
Ren, Yian
Zhao, Tingting
Zeng, Xin
Li, Han
Chen, Yiheng
author_facet Huang, Jianrui
He, Xianyou
Ma, Xiaojin
Ren, Yian
Zhao, Tingting
Zeng, Xin
Li, Han
Chen, Yiheng
author_sort Huang, Jianrui
collection PubMed
description When people make decisions about sequentially presented items in psychophysical experiments, their decisions are always biased by their preceding decisions and the preceding items, either by assimilation (shift towards the decision or item) or contrast (shift away from the decision or item). Such sequential biases also occur in naturalistic and real-world judgments such as facial attractiveness judgments. In this article, we aimed to cast light on the causes of these sequential biases. We first found significant assimilative and contrastive effects in a visual face attractiveness judgment task and an auditory ringtone agreeableness judgment task, indicating that sequential effects are not limited to the visual modality. We then found that the provision of trial-by-trial feedback of the preceding stimulus value eliminated the contrastive effect, but only weakened the assimilative effect. When participants orally reported their judgments rather than indicated them via a keyboard button press, we found a significant diminished assimilative effect, suggesting that motor response repetition strengthened the assimilation bias. Finally, we found that when visual and auditory stimuli were alternated, there was no longer a contrastive effect from the immediately previous trial, but there was an assimilative effect both from the previous trial (cross-modal) and the 2-back trial (same stimulus modality). These findings suggested that the contrastive effect results from perceptual processing, while the assimilative effect results from anchoring of the previous judgment and is strengthened by response repetition and numerical priming.
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spelling pubmed-59953782018-06-21 Sequential biases on subjective judgments: Evidence from face attractiveness and ringtone agreeableness judgment Huang, Jianrui He, Xianyou Ma, Xiaojin Ren, Yian Zhao, Tingting Zeng, Xin Li, Han Chen, Yiheng PLoS One Research Article When people make decisions about sequentially presented items in psychophysical experiments, their decisions are always biased by their preceding decisions and the preceding items, either by assimilation (shift towards the decision or item) or contrast (shift away from the decision or item). Such sequential biases also occur in naturalistic and real-world judgments such as facial attractiveness judgments. In this article, we aimed to cast light on the causes of these sequential biases. We first found significant assimilative and contrastive effects in a visual face attractiveness judgment task and an auditory ringtone agreeableness judgment task, indicating that sequential effects are not limited to the visual modality. We then found that the provision of trial-by-trial feedback of the preceding stimulus value eliminated the contrastive effect, but only weakened the assimilative effect. When participants orally reported their judgments rather than indicated them via a keyboard button press, we found a significant diminished assimilative effect, suggesting that motor response repetition strengthened the assimilation bias. Finally, we found that when visual and auditory stimuli were alternated, there was no longer a contrastive effect from the immediately previous trial, but there was an assimilative effect both from the previous trial (cross-modal) and the 2-back trial (same stimulus modality). These findings suggested that the contrastive effect results from perceptual processing, while the assimilative effect results from anchoring of the previous judgment and is strengthened by response repetition and numerical priming. Public Library of Science 2018-06-11 /pmc/articles/PMC5995378/ /pubmed/29889850 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0198723 Text en © 2018 Huang et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Huang, Jianrui
He, Xianyou
Ma, Xiaojin
Ren, Yian
Zhao, Tingting
Zeng, Xin
Li, Han
Chen, Yiheng
Sequential biases on subjective judgments: Evidence from face attractiveness and ringtone agreeableness judgment
title Sequential biases on subjective judgments: Evidence from face attractiveness and ringtone agreeableness judgment
title_full Sequential biases on subjective judgments: Evidence from face attractiveness and ringtone agreeableness judgment
title_fullStr Sequential biases on subjective judgments: Evidence from face attractiveness and ringtone agreeableness judgment
title_full_unstemmed Sequential biases on subjective judgments: Evidence from face attractiveness and ringtone agreeableness judgment
title_short Sequential biases on subjective judgments: Evidence from face attractiveness and ringtone agreeableness judgment
title_sort sequential biases on subjective judgments: evidence from face attractiveness and ringtone agreeableness judgment
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5995378/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29889850
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0198723
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