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2023
DOI: 10.15626/mp.2022.3108
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Defaults versus framing: Revisiting Default Effect and Framing Effect with replications and extensions of Johnson and Goldstein (2003) and Johnson, Bellman, and Lohse (2002)

Abstract: People tend to stick with a default option instead of switching to another option. For instance, Johnson and Goldstein (2003) found a default effect in an organ donation scenario: if organ donation is the default option, people are more inclined to consent to it. Johnson et al. (2002) found a similar default effect in health-survey scenarios: if receiving more information about your health is the default, people are more inclined to consent to it. Much of the highly cited, impactful work on these default effec… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(1 citation statement)
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References 53 publications
(111 reference statements)
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“…In our,Brick et al (2021),Chandrashekar et al (2022),Imada et al (2022), and others MTurk and Prolific samples, at times using different geographic locations (US versus UK) and different designs, showed very similar results. InChandrashekar et al (2021) and, we had very similar results comparing online samples in the US to Hong Kong undergraduate samples.…”
supporting
confidence: 71%
“…In our,Brick et al (2021),Chandrashekar et al (2022),Imada et al (2022), and others MTurk and Prolific samples, at times using different geographic locations (US versus UK) and different designs, showed very similar results. InChandrashekar et al (2021) and, we had very similar results comparing online samples in the US to Hong Kong undergraduate samples.…”
supporting
confidence: 71%