Focus to an attribute with verbal or numerical quantifiers affects the attribute framing effect

Dawn Liu*, Marie Juanchich, Miroslav Sirota

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

8 Citations (Scopus)
60 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

People find positive attribute frames (e.g., 75% lean) more persuasive than negative ones (e.g., 25% fat). In three pre-registered experiments, we tested whether this effect would be magnified by using verbal quantifiers instead of numerical ones (e.g., ‘high % lean’ vs. ‘75% lean’). This moderating effect of quantifier format was predicted based on previous empirical work and two non-exclusive accounts of framing effects. First, verbal quantifiers are presumed to be a more intuitive format than numerical quantifiers, so might predispose people more to judgement biases such as the framing effect. Second, verbal quantifiers draw a greater focus to the attributes they describe. This could provide a linguistic signal that the positive frame is better than the negative one. In three experiments, we manipulated the attribute frame (positive or negative) and the quantifier format (verbal or numerical) between-subjects, and quantity pairs (e.g., 5% fat and 95% lean or 25% fat and 75% lean) within-subjects. We also tested if participants focused more on the attributes in the frame, by measuring whether participants selected causal sentence completions about the beef that focused on why it had fat meat or lean meat. Results showed a robust framing effect, which was partially mediated by the focus of the sentence completions. However, the verbal format did not increase the magnitude of the framing effect. These results suggest that a focus on the attribute contributes to the framing effect, but contrary to past work, this focus is not different between verbal and numerical quantifiers.

Original languageEnglish
Article number103088
JournalActa Psychologica
Volume208
Early online date1 Jun 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jul 2020

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
Funding: This work was partially supported by a small grant from the Experimental Psychology Society .

Publisher Copyright:
© 2020

Keywords

  • Associative encoding
  • Attribute framing
  • Focus
  • Framing effect
  • Pragmatic inference
  • Quantifiers

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