Heart Strings and Purse Strings: Carryover Effects of Emotions on Economic Decisions

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Related Collections

Degree type

Discipline

Subject

Behavioral Economics
Business
Cognition and Perception
Cognitive Psychology
Experimental Analysis of Behavior
Marketing

Funder

Grant number

License

Copyright date

Distributor

Related resources

Contributor

Abstract

We examined the impact of specific emotions on the endowment effect, the tendency for selling prices to exceed buying or “choice” prices for the same object. As predicted by appraisal-tendency theory, disgust induced by a prior, irrelevant situation carried over to normatively unrelated economic decisions, reducing selling and choice prices and eliminating the endowment effect. Sadness also carried over, reducing selling prices but increasing choice prices—producing a “reverse endowment effect” in which choice prices exceeded selling prices. The results demonstrate that incidental emotions can influence decisions even when real money is at stake, and that emotions of the same valence can have opposing effects on such decisions.

Advisor

Date Range for Data Collection (Start Date)

Date Range for Data Collection (End Date)

Digital Object Identifier

Series name and number

Publication date

2004-05-01

Volume number

Issue number

Publisher

Publisher DOI

Journal Issues

Comments

Recommended citation

Collection