Deck 18: Biases in Managerial Decision Making

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Question
Simplifying strategies are ineffective in reducing the amount of cognitive effort required to reach a judgment.
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Question
Managers experience the pseudodiagnosticity effect any time they treat irrelevant information as relevant.
Question
Focusing only on one possibility and ignoring other possibilities is known as the common knowledge effect.
Question
Group polarization is the opposite of groupthink.
Question
When outcomes are framed in terms of losses, people are risk-seeking.
Question
In the context of a sea of numbers, verbal information will usually get lost because of the salience effect.
Question
Diagnosticity depends on the extent to which information implies one hypothesis over another hypothesis.
Question
Intuitive judgments made on the basis of the representativeness heuristic tends to be non-regressive.
Question
According to the contrast effect, when outcomes are framed in terms of gains, people are risk-averse.
Question
Due to the assimilation effect, we tend to agree too readily with similar others.
Question
Sample size is paid insufficient attention to when people rely heavily on the representativeness heuristic.
Question
The representativeness heuristic influences causal judgments as well as judgments of category membership.
Question
Information quality is determined by two factors: reliability and recentcy.
Question
Concrete information has less impact on our decisions than abstract information.
Question
Information that is emotionally interesting (vs.uninteresting) is more likely to be vivid for the decision maker.
Question
If less relevant information is presented in an interesting manner, it tends to have a greater impact on final decisions than if presented in a dry manner.
Question
The assimilation effect occurs when very different objects or issues are compared and judgments of the target object is displaced away from the reference point.
Question
After launching several new product failures, Bill believes he is "due"for a success.Bill is experiencing the gambler's fallacy.
Question
When losses loom larger than gains, people have loss aversion.
Question
Short-term profits are less vivid and attention-drawing than long-term profits.
Question
In preference reversal, subjects prefer one gamble when they anchor on outcomes and another when they anchor on probabilities.
Question
Managers usually are able to express their opinions of job-related topics, despite situational pressures.
Question
Information that doesn't fluctuate is said to be reliable.
Question
A gamble has two components -an outcome and a probability.
Question
Basing predictions on memory usually leads to very accurate predictions.
Question
Managers tend to focus most on information relevant to a decision, except that which is:

A)interesting
B)complex
C)easy to understand
D)attention drawing
E)well-written
Question
Executives are usually not susceptible to judgmental biases.
Question
Irrelevant information is weighted too lightly in judgment when irrelevant information later becomes relevant.
Question
Judgmental accuracy is influenced by the amount of processing effort a decision maker is likely to allocate to a judgment task.
Question
Overcorrection occurs when managers over analyze and over interpret their decision making processes.
Question
When people that we meet remind us of old acquaintances because their mannerisms are similar, we often infer that these two people are likely to possess other similar characteristics.
Question
Anchors rarely influence expert decision makers.
Question
Job interviews are often influenced by the correspondence bias.
Question
Which of the following is not a factor that influences vividness?

A)Context or background
B)The emotional interest of the information
C)How concrete the information is
D)Whether the information is first hand vs.second hand
E)All of the above influence vividness.
Question
A is a shift in judgment away from a contextual reference point.

A)assimilation effect
B)framing effect
C)accommodation effect
D)contrast effect
E)availability heuristic
Question
According to your readings, unbiased decision making is impossible when and are biased.

A)perception and attention
B)motivation and learning
C)attention and learning
D)attention and memory
E)memory and motivation
Question
Decision makers rarely continue to perceive a belief as true when the basis for the belief is disproved.
Question
The dilution effect is even more pronounced when subjects expect to justify their predictions to others.
Question
The availability heuristic is based on similarity judgments.
Question
Information that stands out from the background is said to be:

A)concrete
B)salient
C)temporally proximal
D)vivid
E)a positive frame
Question
When two similar objects or issues are compared, and they are judged to be very similar, this is an example of what context effect?

A)Assimilation effect
B)Framing effect
C)Correspondence bias effect
D)Contrast effect
E)Availability heuristic
Question
Risky decision making involves making a tradeoff between the desirability and the likelihood of an outcome. However, managers often focus mainly on desirability in some situations, and focus mainly on likelihood in others.This results in inconsistent preferences.Which heuristic is responsible for this bias?

A)The representativeness heuristic
B)The availability heuristic
C)The simulation heuristic
D)The anchoring-and-adjustment heuristic
E)Correspondence bias
Question
Stores that experience extremely low sales in one sales period will typically perform better in the next sales period due to:

A)regression to the mean
B)expected utility theory
C)contrast effect
D)simulation effect
E)perseverance effect
Question
Which of the following is not a bias based on overprocessing?

A)The dilution effect
B)The perseverance effect
C)The correspondence bias
D)Premature cognitive commitment
E)All of the above are based on overprocessing.
Question
Assuming that someone's action are a reflection of their true personality or disposition, and ignoring the possibility that their behavior could be influenced by the situation is known as:

A)the dilution effect
B)the perseverance effect
C)the correspondence bias
D)premature cognitive commitment
E)anchoring-and-adjustment effect
Question
Kelly is interviewing candidates for a job in her department.She meets Bill.Bill mentions that he is from California. The last person Kelly hired from California had to be fired.Kelly infers that Bill probably won't make a good employee.Kelly is falling victim to what effect?

A)A contrast effect
B)The simulation heuristic
C)The correspondence bias
D)An irrelevant analogy
E)Sensitivity to sample size effect
Question
Various television shows about shark attacks makes it easy to imagine that one could be attacked by a shark when visiting the beach.This assumption is based on what effect?

A)Biased assimilation effect
B)The availability heuristic
C)The simulation heuristic
D)The anchoring-and-adjustment heuristic
E)The dilution effect
Question
Which bias results from underprocessing?

A)Insensitivity to sample size
B)The perseverance effect
C)The salience effect
D)The vividness effect
E)All of the above result from underprocessing.
Question
is the tendency to focus on one possibility at a time and ignore other possibilities.

A)Groupthink
B)Correspondence bias
C)Pseudodiagnosticity effect
D)Assimilation effect
E)Selective hypothesis testing
Question
Busy decision makers tend to focus on:

A)all the possibilities
B)one interpretation
C)two to three categories
D)no hypotheses
E)only relevant information
Question
Which of the following heuristics involve judgment based on imagination?

A)Groupthink
B)The availability heuristic
C)The contrast effect
D)The anchoring-and-adjustment heuristic
E)None of the above is correct.
Question
Horne appraisals offered by real estate agents are heavily influenced by listing prices, even when more objective and more useful information is available.Which cognitive heuristic is responsible for this bias?

A)Correspondence bias
B)Availability heuristic
C)Simulation heuristic
D)Anchoring-and-adjustment heuristic
E)Premature cognitive commitment effect
Question
After approving a $100,000 expenditure for a new piece of capital equipment, deciding to spend $10,000 on a print advertisement seems inconsequential.This is an example of what type of effect?

A)Biased assimilation effect
B)Framing effect
C)Correspondence bias effect
D)Contrast effect
E)Availability heuristic
Question
Which of the following heuristics involve judgments based on memory?

A)The representativeness heuristic
B)The availability heuristic
C)The simulation heuristic
D)The anchoring-and-adjustment heuristic
E)The correspondence bias
Question
What is the best way to overcome groupthink?

A)Encourage group polarization
B)Have a strong leader
C)Frequently seek the opinion of impartial consultants
D)Always have an agenda
E)Always recap.what was discussed at the last meeting
Question
Which of the following is not a common group decision making problem?

A)Common knowledge effect
B)Groupthink
C)Group polarization
D)Selective hypothesis testing
E)All of the above are correct.
Question
A manager who helped develop a new product that looks like it would be successful predicted a 90% chance of success for the new product.However, historical data indicate that of all new products introduced, only about 50% succeed.This suggests that the manager's prediction was guided primarily by the:

A)representativeness heuristic
B)availability heuristic
C)simulation heuristic
D)anchoring-and-adjustment heuristic
E)contrast effect
Question
is a shift toward a contextual reference point.

A)Assimilation effect
B)Dilution effect
C)Correspondence bias effect
D)Contrast effect
E)Simulation heuristic
Question
John thinks Mary is a great team member in his department based on a project he worked with her on a few months ago.During a current project, John has received several complaints about Mary from various team members.Despite this, John persists in believing his initial opinion of Mary is correct.This is an example of what effect?

A)Biased assimilation effect
B)Framing effect
C)Correspondence bias effect
D)Pseudodiagnosticity
E)Dilution effect
Question
When managers treat irrelevant information as if it were relevant, they exhibit:

A)contrast effect
B)context effect
C)pseudodiagnosticity effect
D)assimilation effect
E)anchoring-and-adjustment effect
Question
What affect does the "wording" of a problem have on managers' decisions?
Question
What are the most common types of context effects?
Question
Discuss the effects that ofteu influence group decision making.
Question
What does Diagnosticity depend upon?
Question
Discuss the conditions that influence whether or not information is "vivid"for a manager engaging in decision making.
Question
What is the difference between the dilution effect and the perseverance effect?
Question
What effect could bright color potentially have on information being presented? Why?
Question
Define the availability heuristic.
Question
What are the biases the result from "overprocessing?"
Question
When an event is ambiguous, what guides interpretations? What bias can this lead to?
Question
occurs when a decision maker continues to perceive a belief as true even when the basis for the belief is disproved.

A)A contrast effect
B)The simulation heuristic
C)Pseudodiagnosticity
D)The perseverance effect
E)None of the above is correct.
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Deck 18: Biases in Managerial Decision Making
1
Simplifying strategies are ineffective in reducing the amount of cognitive effort required to reach a judgment.
False
2
Managers experience the pseudodiagnosticity effect any time they treat irrelevant information as relevant.
True
3
Focusing only on one possibility and ignoring other possibilities is known as the common knowledge effect.
False
4
Group polarization is the opposite of groupthink.
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5
When outcomes are framed in terms of losses, people are risk-seeking.
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6
In the context of a sea of numbers, verbal information will usually get lost because of the salience effect.
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7
Diagnosticity depends on the extent to which information implies one hypothesis over another hypothesis.
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8
Intuitive judgments made on the basis of the representativeness heuristic tends to be non-regressive.
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9
According to the contrast effect, when outcomes are framed in terms of gains, people are risk-averse.
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10
Due to the assimilation effect, we tend to agree too readily with similar others.
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11
Sample size is paid insufficient attention to when people rely heavily on the representativeness heuristic.
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12
The representativeness heuristic influences causal judgments as well as judgments of category membership.
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13
Information quality is determined by two factors: reliability and recentcy.
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14
Concrete information has less impact on our decisions than abstract information.
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15
Information that is emotionally interesting (vs.uninteresting) is more likely to be vivid for the decision maker.
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16
If less relevant information is presented in an interesting manner, it tends to have a greater impact on final decisions than if presented in a dry manner.
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17
The assimilation effect occurs when very different objects or issues are compared and judgments of the target object is displaced away from the reference point.
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18
After launching several new product failures, Bill believes he is "due"for a success.Bill is experiencing the gambler's fallacy.
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19
When losses loom larger than gains, people have loss aversion.
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20
Short-term profits are less vivid and attention-drawing than long-term profits.
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21
In preference reversal, subjects prefer one gamble when they anchor on outcomes and another when they anchor on probabilities.
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22
Managers usually are able to express their opinions of job-related topics, despite situational pressures.
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23
Information that doesn't fluctuate is said to be reliable.
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24
A gamble has two components -an outcome and a probability.
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25
Basing predictions on memory usually leads to very accurate predictions.
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26
Managers tend to focus most on information relevant to a decision, except that which is:

A)interesting
B)complex
C)easy to understand
D)attention drawing
E)well-written
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27
Executives are usually not susceptible to judgmental biases.
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28
Irrelevant information is weighted too lightly in judgment when irrelevant information later becomes relevant.
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29
Judgmental accuracy is influenced by the amount of processing effort a decision maker is likely to allocate to a judgment task.
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30
Overcorrection occurs when managers over analyze and over interpret their decision making processes.
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31
When people that we meet remind us of old acquaintances because their mannerisms are similar, we often infer that these two people are likely to possess other similar characteristics.
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32
Anchors rarely influence expert decision makers.
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33
Job interviews are often influenced by the correspondence bias.
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34
Which of the following is not a factor that influences vividness?

A)Context or background
B)The emotional interest of the information
C)How concrete the information is
D)Whether the information is first hand vs.second hand
E)All of the above influence vividness.
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35
A is a shift in judgment away from a contextual reference point.

A)assimilation effect
B)framing effect
C)accommodation effect
D)contrast effect
E)availability heuristic
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k this deck
36
According to your readings, unbiased decision making is impossible when and are biased.

A)perception and attention
B)motivation and learning
C)attention and learning
D)attention and memory
E)memory and motivation
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k this deck
37
Decision makers rarely continue to perceive a belief as true when the basis for the belief is disproved.
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k this deck
38
The dilution effect is even more pronounced when subjects expect to justify their predictions to others.
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39
The availability heuristic is based on similarity judgments.
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40
Information that stands out from the background is said to be:

A)concrete
B)salient
C)temporally proximal
D)vivid
E)a positive frame
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k this deck
41
When two similar objects or issues are compared, and they are judged to be very similar, this is an example of what context effect?

A)Assimilation effect
B)Framing effect
C)Correspondence bias effect
D)Contrast effect
E)Availability heuristic
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Risky decision making involves making a tradeoff between the desirability and the likelihood of an outcome. However, managers often focus mainly on desirability in some situations, and focus mainly on likelihood in others.This results in inconsistent preferences.Which heuristic is responsible for this bias?

A)The representativeness heuristic
B)The availability heuristic
C)The simulation heuristic
D)The anchoring-and-adjustment heuristic
E)Correspondence bias
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Stores that experience extremely low sales in one sales period will typically perform better in the next sales period due to:

A)regression to the mean
B)expected utility theory
C)contrast effect
D)simulation effect
E)perseverance effect
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
Which of the following is not a bias based on overprocessing?

A)The dilution effect
B)The perseverance effect
C)The correspondence bias
D)Premature cognitive commitment
E)All of the above are based on overprocessing.
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
45
Assuming that someone's action are a reflection of their true personality or disposition, and ignoring the possibility that their behavior could be influenced by the situation is known as:

A)the dilution effect
B)the perseverance effect
C)the correspondence bias
D)premature cognitive commitment
E)anchoring-and-adjustment effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
Kelly is interviewing candidates for a job in her department.She meets Bill.Bill mentions that he is from California. The last person Kelly hired from California had to be fired.Kelly infers that Bill probably won't make a good employee.Kelly is falling victim to what effect?

A)A contrast effect
B)The simulation heuristic
C)The correspondence bias
D)An irrelevant analogy
E)Sensitivity to sample size effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
Various television shows about shark attacks makes it easy to imagine that one could be attacked by a shark when visiting the beach.This assumption is based on what effect?

A)Biased assimilation effect
B)The availability heuristic
C)The simulation heuristic
D)The anchoring-and-adjustment heuristic
E)The dilution effect
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
Which bias results from underprocessing?

A)Insensitivity to sample size
B)The perseverance effect
C)The salience effect
D)The vividness effect
E)All of the above result from underprocessing.
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
is the tendency to focus on one possibility at a time and ignore other possibilities.

A)Groupthink
B)Correspondence bias
C)Pseudodiagnosticity effect
D)Assimilation effect
E)Selective hypothesis testing
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
Busy decision makers tend to focus on:

A)all the possibilities
B)one interpretation
C)two to three categories
D)no hypotheses
E)only relevant information
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
Which of the following heuristics involve judgment based on imagination?

A)Groupthink
B)The availability heuristic
C)The contrast effect
D)The anchoring-and-adjustment heuristic
E)None of the above is correct.
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Horne appraisals offered by real estate agents are heavily influenced by listing prices, even when more objective and more useful information is available.Which cognitive heuristic is responsible for this bias?

A)Correspondence bias
B)Availability heuristic
C)Simulation heuristic
D)Anchoring-and-adjustment heuristic
E)Premature cognitive commitment effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
After approving a $100,000 expenditure for a new piece of capital equipment, deciding to spend $10,000 on a print advertisement seems inconsequential.This is an example of what type of effect?

A)Biased assimilation effect
B)Framing effect
C)Correspondence bias effect
D)Contrast effect
E)Availability heuristic
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
Which of the following heuristics involve judgments based on memory?

A)The representativeness heuristic
B)The availability heuristic
C)The simulation heuristic
D)The anchoring-and-adjustment heuristic
E)The correspondence bias
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
What is the best way to overcome groupthink?

A)Encourage group polarization
B)Have a strong leader
C)Frequently seek the opinion of impartial consultants
D)Always have an agenda
E)Always recap.what was discussed at the last meeting
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
Which of the following is not a common group decision making problem?

A)Common knowledge effect
B)Groupthink
C)Group polarization
D)Selective hypothesis testing
E)All of the above are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
A manager who helped develop a new product that looks like it would be successful predicted a 90% chance of success for the new product.However, historical data indicate that of all new products introduced, only about 50% succeed.This suggests that the manager's prediction was guided primarily by the:

A)representativeness heuristic
B)availability heuristic
C)simulation heuristic
D)anchoring-and-adjustment heuristic
E)contrast effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
58
is a shift toward a contextual reference point.

A)Assimilation effect
B)Dilution effect
C)Correspondence bias effect
D)Contrast effect
E)Simulation heuristic
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
59
John thinks Mary is a great team member in his department based on a project he worked with her on a few months ago.During a current project, John has received several complaints about Mary from various team members.Despite this, John persists in believing his initial opinion of Mary is correct.This is an example of what effect?

A)Biased assimilation effect
B)Framing effect
C)Correspondence bias effect
D)Pseudodiagnosticity
E)Dilution effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
60
When managers treat irrelevant information as if it were relevant, they exhibit:

A)contrast effect
B)context effect
C)pseudodiagnosticity effect
D)assimilation effect
E)anchoring-and-adjustment effect
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Unlock for access to all 71 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
What affect does the "wording" of a problem have on managers' decisions?
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62
What are the most common types of context effects?
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63
Discuss the effects that ofteu influence group decision making.
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64
What does Diagnosticity depend upon?
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65
Discuss the conditions that influence whether or not information is "vivid"for a manager engaging in decision making.
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66
What is the difference between the dilution effect and the perseverance effect?
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67
What effect could bright color potentially have on information being presented? Why?
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68
Define the availability heuristic.
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69
What are the biases the result from "overprocessing?"
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70
When an event is ambiguous, what guides interpretations? What bias can this lead to?
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71
occurs when a decision maker continues to perceive a belief as true even when the basis for the belief is disproved.

A)A contrast effect
B)The simulation heuristic
C)Pseudodiagnosticity
D)The perseverance effect
E)None of the above is correct.
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