Deck 5: Risk and Consumer Decision Making

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Question
In both the endowment effect and sunk cost effect consumer tend to overestimate opportunity costs.
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Question
As risk perceptions increase, fear appeals become less effective.
Question
Price bundling is often used by firms to segregate consumer losses.
Question
The framing effect is in direct violation to the invariance principle.
Question
Rogaine (a hair replenishment product) uses the framing effect when it states that 26% of men who use the product get excellent results.
Question
The fact that the difference between $0 and $100 seems larger than the difference between $1000 and $1,100 is due to loss aversion.
Question
Research on the framing effect shows that people tend to overestimate the likelihood of very small probabilities, which makes lotteries seem more attractive than they really are.
Question
Expected utility theory suggests that all alternatives can be rank ordered from worst to best and that alternatives with the highest expected values should be preferred.
Question
In preference reversal, subjects prefer one gamble when they anchor on outcomes and another when they anchor on probabilities.
Question
Due to the sunk cost effect, people are often reluctant to walk away from buying something after they have invested lots of time and effort in searching for and evaluating the product.
Question
The brand positivity effect is the tendency to view a product as more valuable if one owns it (vs. does not own it).
Question
If a consumer likes brand A more than brand B and likes brand B more than brand C, then it follows that the consumer must like brand A more than brand C too. This is an example of the invariance principle.
Question
According to expected utility theory, people should think about uncertain events in terms of frequencies.
Question
According to the framing effect, when people think of decisions in terms of positive outcomes, they are risk averse.
Question
Research on loss aversion shows that people would rather lose $100 in $10 increments, over 10 occasions, than lose the $100 dollars all at once.
Question
In the framing effect, preferences are said to have "reference dependence."
Question
Choice deferral refers to a reluctance to make a decision for some reason.
Question
Loss aversion implies that losses have a bigger impact on people, relative to equivalent gains.
Question
Liz is considering buying a new refrigerator for $1,000. It has a 20% chance of requiring a repair in the next year. The expected value in terms of repair costs for this purchase is $1,200.
Question
For consumers, many small gains are not as pleasant as one large gain, which means marketers should aggregate consumer gains.
Question
Lois is considering buying a new bicycle for $200. It has a 20% chance of breaking down in the next year. What is the expected value in terms of repair cost for this purchase?

A) $240
B) $400
C) $20
D) $200
E) $40
Question
As part of expected utility theory, what principle states that preferences should remain the same no matter how preferences are measured and no matter how decision alternatives are described?

A) Probability principles
B) Transitive principle
C) Choice deferral principle
D) Domination principle
E) Invariance principle
Question
Comparative evaluation is easier, and therefore, more common than singular evaluation.
Question
Nick is considering buying a new bicycle. Here are his options: Bike A - costs $100. It has a 60% chance of breaking down in the next year.
Bike B - costs $200. It has a 20% chance of breaking down in the next year.
Bike C - costs $400. It has a 15% chance of breaking down in the next year.
Which bike should Nick purchase based on expected utility theory of repair costs?

A) Bike A
B) Bike B
C) Bike C
D) Either bike A or C
E) We can't possibly answer the question with the information provided.
Question
According to expected utility theory, people should think about uncertain events in terms of:

A) the get-got gap
B) frequencies
C) gambles
D) selective thinking
E) the sunk cost effect
Question
Research on the framing effect shows that decision makers are risk averse when they focus on _____ and risk seeking when they focus on _____.

A) gains; gains
B) gains; losses
C) losses; gains
D) losses; losses
E) None of the above is correct.
Question
Selective thinking influences the degree to which consumers rely on the price-quality heuristic.
Question
Research shows that when consumers expect to have to fill out a customer satisfaction survey, they focus mainly on positives to make themselves look good.
Question
In singular evaluation, consumers evaluate products one-at-a-time.
Question
Research shows that American consumers are typically more overconfident in their decision making than Asian consumers.
Question
Selective thinking is more likely to occur in singular (vs. comparative) evaluation.
Question
_____ suggest(s) all alternatives can be rank-ordered from worst to best and that alternatives with highest expected values should be preferred.

A) Framing effects
B) The law of large numbers
C) The endowment effect
D) Expected utility theory
E) Bounded rationality theory
Question
Selectively overestimating the magnitude of the relationship between price and quality can be attenuated when consumers are motivated to consider exceptions to the relationship.
Question
Decision making under uncertainty where different outcomes are possible with different probabilities form the basis of:

A) consumer behavior
B) risky decision making
C) the get-got gap
D) selective thinking
E) the sunk cost effect
Question
When you ask a consumer to reject some alternative, he/she will probably focus selectively on negative attributes due to selective thinking.
Question
Which of the following statements about the framing effect is false?

A) The framing effect violates the invariance principle.
B) In the framing effect, preferences are said to have "reference dependence."
C) When people think of decisions in terms positive outcomes they tend to be risk seeking.
D) The framing effect can be seen across a wide variety of decision contexts.
E) The framing effect can cause preference reversals.
Question
Questions about money lead consumers to focus on money and questions about probabilities lead consumers to focus on probabilities. This is the basis of the dominance principle.
Question
If a consumer likes pizza more than lasagna and likes lasagna more than spaghetti, then it follows that the consumer must like pizza more than spaghetti too. This example is an example of what concept?

A) Invariance principle
B) Transitive principle
C) Choice deferral principle
D) Domination principle
E) None of the above is correct.
Question
In both singular evaluation and comparative evaluation, attributes that are familiar and easy to evaluate (versus unfamiliar and difficult to evaluate) have a greater impact on preference.
Question
Selective thinking could also be called one-sided thinking.
Question
Excessive concern about possible future feelings of regret can lead consumers to commit:

A) selective processing
B) loss aversion
C) the brand positivity effect
D) choice deferral
E) the endowment effect
Question
Consumers are more likely to buy ground beef described as 75% lean as opposed to 25% fat. This is an example of which phenomenon?

A) Attraction effect
B) Compromise effect
C) Preference reversal
D) Framing effect
E) Endowment effect
Question
In the endowment effect and the sunk cost effect, consumers underestimate:

A) motivation
B) expected utility
C) opportunity costs
D) selective processing
E) the diminishing sensitivity effect
Question
Consumers often overestimate the strength the relationship between price and quality, leading to an over-reliance on the price-quality heuristic. This is due to what phenomenon:

A) endowment effect
B) dominance effect
C) selecting thinking
D) framing effect
E) None of the above is correct.
Question
Terri decides to take golf lessons and pays $300 for 10 lessons. After the 4th lesson, Terri has decided she hates golf. She continues to play (unhappily) saying, "I don't want to waste the $300!" Terri is experiencing the:

A) sunk cost effect
B) endowment effect
C) invariance effect
D) brand positivity effect
E) diminishing sensitivity effect
Question
Paul went to the store to purchase a new refrigerator but quickly got so overwhelmed by all the features of the various choices that he ended of going home empty-handed. This is an example of:

A) selective processing
B) framing effect
C) the brand positivity effect
D) choice deferral
E) the endowment effect
Question
Which of the following factors does not potentially cause preference reversal:

A) singular vs. comparative evaluation
B) the compatibility principle
C) the framing effect
D) the sunk cost effect
E) All of the above potentially cause preference reversals.
Question
Which of the following statements about the concept of loss aversion, as it relates to the framing effect, is true?

A) Loss aversion implies that losses have a bigger impact on people, relative to equivalent gains.
B) People tend to overestimate the likelihood of very small probabilities.
C) Loss aversion can violate the dominance principle.
D) Loss aversion implies that marketers should aggregate loses for customers.
E) All of the above statements are true.
Question
"Losses loom larger than gains." What concept explains this statement?

A) Diminishing sensitivity
B) Transitivity
C) Loss aversion
D) Preference reversal
E) Risk aversion
Question
The idea that as preferences change when reference points related to those preferences change is known as what concept?

A) Reference dependence
B) Preference reversal
C) The framing effect
D) The base rate
E) Invariance principle
Question
The _____ is the tendency to view a product as more valuable if one owns it.

A) sunk cost effect
B) transitivity effect
C) compatibility principle
D) brand positivity effect
E) None of the above is correct.
Question
Spending $100 on groceries seems like a lot of money to a poor person and like little money to a wealthy person. This statement represents what concept?

A) Reference dependence
B) Preference reversal
C) The sunk cost effect
D) The law of large numbers
E) Invariance principle
Question
In order to keep customers happy, cruise lines typically include the price of the cruise, the room, the meals, the beverages, and the poolside snacks into the overall price of the cruise. This is an example of:

A) risk aversion
B) transitivity
C) price bundling
D) expected utility theory
E) the sunk cost effect
Question
When a consumer evaluates products two or more at a time, we call this:

A) singular evaluation
B) choice deferral
C) the compatibility principle
D) selecting thinking
E) None of the above is correct.
Question
Questions about money lead consumers to focus on money. Questions about probabilities lead consumers to focus on probabilities. This is the basis of what concept?

A) The compatibility principle
B) Choice deferral
C) The endowment effect
D) Comparative evaluation
E) The sunk cost effect
Question
Which of the following is not a concept that helps explain the framing effect?

A) Diminishing sensitivity
B) Transitivity
C) Loss aversion
D) Reference dependence
E) Risk aversion
Question
The _____ is the tendency to not give up a product or service because a significant amount of time, money, or effort has already been invested in it.

A) sunk cost effect
B) endowment effect
C) compatibility principle
D) brand positivity effect
E) choice deferral effect
Question
George was examining a sweater at a department store. When he considered the color in terms of what his male friends might say, he decided he didn't like it. But then, his girlfriend walked up beside him and said he would look good in the sweater. Suddenly, the sweater was more appealing. George is experiencing:

A) loss aversion
B) risk invariance
C) the endowment effect
D) preference reversal
E) the sunk cost effect
Question
Loss aversion implies that marketers should aggregate _____ and segregate _____.

A) gains; gains
B) gains; losses
C) losses; gains
D) losses; losses
E) None of the above is correct.
Question
Sally buys a painting at a garage sale for $25. A houseguest sees the painting hanging in Sally's house and offers to buy the painting from her for $50. Sally does not want to sell the painting despite the fact that she would never pay this much for a similar painting.

A) sunk cost effect
B) endowment effect
C) compatibility principle
D) brand positivity effect
E) None of the above is correct.
Question
Define the sunk cost effect and provide an example of this effect.
Question
What is a preference reversal and what causes a preference reversal?
Question
When questions are framed negatively, people tend to respond differently than when problems are framed positively. Explain this.
Question
Define the brand positivity effect.
Question
Explain the statement, "Losses loom larger than gains."
Question
Why do consumers often fail to maximize expected value, leading to choices they later regret?
Question
Define the endowment effect and provide an example of this effect.
Question
When it comes to gains versus losses, what does the concept of loss aversion imply for marketers?
Question
Nick is considering buying a new bicycle. Here are his options:
Bike A - costs $100. It has a 60% chance of breaking down in the next year.
Bike B - costs $200. It has a 20% chance of breaking down in the next year.
Bike C - costs $400. It has a 15% chance of breaking down in the next year.
Which bike should Nick purchase based on expected utility theory of repair costs?
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Deck 5: Risk and Consumer Decision Making
1
In both the endowment effect and sunk cost effect consumer tend to overestimate opportunity costs.
False
2
As risk perceptions increase, fear appeals become less effective.
False
3
Price bundling is often used by firms to segregate consumer losses.
False
4
The framing effect is in direct violation to the invariance principle.
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5
Rogaine (a hair replenishment product) uses the framing effect when it states that 26% of men who use the product get excellent results.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
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6
The fact that the difference between $0 and $100 seems larger than the difference between $1000 and $1,100 is due to loss aversion.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
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7
Research on the framing effect shows that people tend to overestimate the likelihood of very small probabilities, which makes lotteries seem more attractive than they really are.
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k this deck
8
Expected utility theory suggests that all alternatives can be rank ordered from worst to best and that alternatives with the highest expected values should be preferred.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
In preference reversal, subjects prefer one gamble when they anchor on outcomes and another when they anchor on probabilities.
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10
Due to the sunk cost effect, people are often reluctant to walk away from buying something after they have invested lots of time and effort in searching for and evaluating the product.
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k this deck
11
The brand positivity effect is the tendency to view a product as more valuable if one owns it (vs. does not own it).
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12
If a consumer likes brand A more than brand B and likes brand B more than brand C, then it follows that the consumer must like brand A more than brand C too. This is an example of the invariance principle.
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13
According to expected utility theory, people should think about uncertain events in terms of frequencies.
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14
According to the framing effect, when people think of decisions in terms of positive outcomes, they are risk averse.
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15
Research on loss aversion shows that people would rather lose $100 in $10 increments, over 10 occasions, than lose the $100 dollars all at once.
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k this deck
16
In the framing effect, preferences are said to have "reference dependence."
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17
Choice deferral refers to a reluctance to make a decision for some reason.
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18
Loss aversion implies that losses have a bigger impact on people, relative to equivalent gains.
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k this deck
19
Liz is considering buying a new refrigerator for $1,000. It has a 20% chance of requiring a repair in the next year. The expected value in terms of repair costs for this purchase is $1,200.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
For consumers, many small gains are not as pleasant as one large gain, which means marketers should aggregate consumer gains.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Lois is considering buying a new bicycle for $200. It has a 20% chance of breaking down in the next year. What is the expected value in terms of repair cost for this purchase?

A) $240
B) $400
C) $20
D) $200
E) $40
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
22
As part of expected utility theory, what principle states that preferences should remain the same no matter how preferences are measured and no matter how decision alternatives are described?

A) Probability principles
B) Transitive principle
C) Choice deferral principle
D) Domination principle
E) Invariance principle
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k this deck
23
Comparative evaluation is easier, and therefore, more common than singular evaluation.
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24
Nick is considering buying a new bicycle. Here are his options: Bike A - costs $100. It has a 60% chance of breaking down in the next year.
Bike B - costs $200. It has a 20% chance of breaking down in the next year.
Bike C - costs $400. It has a 15% chance of breaking down in the next year.
Which bike should Nick purchase based on expected utility theory of repair costs?

A) Bike A
B) Bike B
C) Bike C
D) Either bike A or C
E) We can't possibly answer the question with the information provided.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
According to expected utility theory, people should think about uncertain events in terms of:

A) the get-got gap
B) frequencies
C) gambles
D) selective thinking
E) the sunk cost effect
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Research on the framing effect shows that decision makers are risk averse when they focus on _____ and risk seeking when they focus on _____.

A) gains; gains
B) gains; losses
C) losses; gains
D) losses; losses
E) None of the above is correct.
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k this deck
27
Selective thinking influences the degree to which consumers rely on the price-quality heuristic.
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k this deck
28
Research shows that when consumers expect to have to fill out a customer satisfaction survey, they focus mainly on positives to make themselves look good.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
In singular evaluation, consumers evaluate products one-at-a-time.
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30
Research shows that American consumers are typically more overconfident in their decision making than Asian consumers.
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k this deck
31
Selective thinking is more likely to occur in singular (vs. comparative) evaluation.
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k this deck
32
_____ suggest(s) all alternatives can be rank-ordered from worst to best and that alternatives with highest expected values should be preferred.

A) Framing effects
B) The law of large numbers
C) The endowment effect
D) Expected utility theory
E) Bounded rationality theory
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Selectively overestimating the magnitude of the relationship between price and quality can be attenuated when consumers are motivated to consider exceptions to the relationship.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Decision making under uncertainty where different outcomes are possible with different probabilities form the basis of:

A) consumer behavior
B) risky decision making
C) the get-got gap
D) selective thinking
E) the sunk cost effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
When you ask a consumer to reject some alternative, he/she will probably focus selectively on negative attributes due to selective thinking.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Which of the following statements about the framing effect is false?

A) The framing effect violates the invariance principle.
B) In the framing effect, preferences are said to have "reference dependence."
C) When people think of decisions in terms positive outcomes they tend to be risk seeking.
D) The framing effect can be seen across a wide variety of decision contexts.
E) The framing effect can cause preference reversals.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Questions about money lead consumers to focus on money and questions about probabilities lead consumers to focus on probabilities. This is the basis of the dominance principle.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
If a consumer likes pizza more than lasagna and likes lasagna more than spaghetti, then it follows that the consumer must like pizza more than spaghetti too. This example is an example of what concept?

A) Invariance principle
B) Transitive principle
C) Choice deferral principle
D) Domination principle
E) None of the above is correct.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
In both singular evaluation and comparative evaluation, attributes that are familiar and easy to evaluate (versus unfamiliar and difficult to evaluate) have a greater impact on preference.
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k this deck
40
Selective thinking could also be called one-sided thinking.
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k this deck
41
Excessive concern about possible future feelings of regret can lead consumers to commit:

A) selective processing
B) loss aversion
C) the brand positivity effect
D) choice deferral
E) the endowment effect
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Consumers are more likely to buy ground beef described as 75% lean as opposed to 25% fat. This is an example of which phenomenon?

A) Attraction effect
B) Compromise effect
C) Preference reversal
D) Framing effect
E) Endowment effect
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
In the endowment effect and the sunk cost effect, consumers underestimate:

A) motivation
B) expected utility
C) opportunity costs
D) selective processing
E) the diminishing sensitivity effect
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
Consumers often overestimate the strength the relationship between price and quality, leading to an over-reliance on the price-quality heuristic. This is due to what phenomenon:

A) endowment effect
B) dominance effect
C) selecting thinking
D) framing effect
E) None of the above is correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Terri decides to take golf lessons and pays $300 for 10 lessons. After the 4th lesson, Terri has decided she hates golf. She continues to play (unhappily) saying, "I don't want to waste the $300!" Terri is experiencing the:

A) sunk cost effect
B) endowment effect
C) invariance effect
D) brand positivity effect
E) diminishing sensitivity effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
Paul went to the store to purchase a new refrigerator but quickly got so overwhelmed by all the features of the various choices that he ended of going home empty-handed. This is an example of:

A) selective processing
B) framing effect
C) the brand positivity effect
D) choice deferral
E) the endowment effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
Which of the following factors does not potentially cause preference reversal:

A) singular vs. comparative evaluation
B) the compatibility principle
C) the framing effect
D) the sunk cost effect
E) All of the above potentially cause preference reversals.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
Which of the following statements about the concept of loss aversion, as it relates to the framing effect, is true?

A) Loss aversion implies that losses have a bigger impact on people, relative to equivalent gains.
B) People tend to overestimate the likelihood of very small probabilities.
C) Loss aversion can violate the dominance principle.
D) Loss aversion implies that marketers should aggregate loses for customers.
E) All of the above statements are true.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
"Losses loom larger than gains." What concept explains this statement?

A) Diminishing sensitivity
B) Transitivity
C) Loss aversion
D) Preference reversal
E) Risk aversion
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
The idea that as preferences change when reference points related to those preferences change is known as what concept?

A) Reference dependence
B) Preference reversal
C) The framing effect
D) The base rate
E) Invariance principle
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
The _____ is the tendency to view a product as more valuable if one owns it.

A) sunk cost effect
B) transitivity effect
C) compatibility principle
D) brand positivity effect
E) None of the above is correct.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Spending $100 on groceries seems like a lot of money to a poor person and like little money to a wealthy person. This statement represents what concept?

A) Reference dependence
B) Preference reversal
C) The sunk cost effect
D) The law of large numbers
E) Invariance principle
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
In order to keep customers happy, cruise lines typically include the price of the cruise, the room, the meals, the beverages, and the poolside snacks into the overall price of the cruise. This is an example of:

A) risk aversion
B) transitivity
C) price bundling
D) expected utility theory
E) the sunk cost effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
When a consumer evaluates products two or more at a time, we call this:

A) singular evaluation
B) choice deferral
C) the compatibility principle
D) selecting thinking
E) None of the above is correct.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
Questions about money lead consumers to focus on money. Questions about probabilities lead consumers to focus on probabilities. This is the basis of what concept?

A) The compatibility principle
B) Choice deferral
C) The endowment effect
D) Comparative evaluation
E) The sunk cost effect
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
Which of the following is not a concept that helps explain the framing effect?

A) Diminishing sensitivity
B) Transitivity
C) Loss aversion
D) Reference dependence
E) Risk aversion
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
The _____ is the tendency to not give up a product or service because a significant amount of time, money, or effort has already been invested in it.

A) sunk cost effect
B) endowment effect
C) compatibility principle
D) brand positivity effect
E) choice deferral effect
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
58
George was examining a sweater at a department store. When he considered the color in terms of what his male friends might say, he decided he didn't like it. But then, his girlfriend walked up beside him and said he would look good in the sweater. Suddenly, the sweater was more appealing. George is experiencing:

A) loss aversion
B) risk invariance
C) the endowment effect
D) preference reversal
E) the sunk cost effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
59
Loss aversion implies that marketers should aggregate _____ and segregate _____.

A) gains; gains
B) gains; losses
C) losses; gains
D) losses; losses
E) None of the above is correct.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
60
Sally buys a painting at a garage sale for $25. A houseguest sees the painting hanging in Sally's house and offers to buy the painting from her for $50. Sally does not want to sell the painting despite the fact that she would never pay this much for a similar painting.

A) sunk cost effect
B) endowment effect
C) compatibility principle
D) brand positivity effect
E) None of the above is correct.
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61
Define the sunk cost effect and provide an example of this effect.
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62
What is a preference reversal and what causes a preference reversal?
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63
When questions are framed negatively, people tend to respond differently than when problems are framed positively. Explain this.
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64
Define the brand positivity effect.
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65
Explain the statement, "Losses loom larger than gains."
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66
Why do consumers often fail to maximize expected value, leading to choices they later regret?
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67
Define the endowment effect and provide an example of this effect.
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68
When it comes to gains versus losses, what does the concept of loss aversion imply for marketers?
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69
Nick is considering buying a new bicycle. Here are his options:
Bike A - costs $100. It has a 60% chance of breaking down in the next year.
Bike B - costs $200. It has a 20% chance of breaking down in the next year.
Bike C - costs $400. It has a 15% chance of breaking down in the next year.
Which bike should Nick purchase based on expected utility theory of repair costs?
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