1992
DOI: 10.1177/0146167292184002
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On the Functional Value of Attitudes: The Influence of Accessible Attitudes on the Ease and Quality of Decision Making

Abstract: A series of experiments relevant to the functional value of accessible attitudes is reported. Experiment 1 established that diastolic blood pressure was sensitive to the task demands involved in subjects' expression of a preference between pairs of abstract paintings. In Experiments 2 and 3, subjects who had developed and rehearsed attitudes toward the individual paintings displayed a smaller elevation in diastolic blood pressure while performing this pairwise preference task than control subjects, suggesting … Show more

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Cited by 83 publications
(106 citation statements)
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References 22 publications
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“…The underlying explanation for this rests on the idea of attitudes. Attitudes have been found to help categorize objects (Smith et al 1996), assist decision-making ease (Blascovich et al 1993) and decisionmaking quality (Fazio et al 1992). Thus employees with optimistic attitudes could be more likely to evaluate virtuous practices and policies within the organization through a lens of optimism.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The underlying explanation for this rests on the idea of attitudes. Attitudes have been found to help categorize objects (Smith et al 1996), assist decision-making ease (Blascovich et al 1993) and decisionmaking quality (Fazio et al 1992). Thus employees with optimistic attitudes could be more likely to evaluate virtuous practices and policies within the organization through a lens of optimism.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, attitude rehearsal has been shown to ease later decisionmaking, decreasing the resources that are needed to reach evaluative decisions. When asked to make rapid decisions about their preferences between pairs of objects, individuals who had earlier been induced to develop and rehearse attitudes toward novel objects displayed less cardiovascular reactivity than individuals who had been exposed to the objects equally often but in the context of a task that was unrelated to attitudes (Blascovich, et al, 1993;Fazio, Blascovich, & Driscoll, 1992). Likewise, less reactivity was exhibited when individuals made decisions involving objects for which they had earlier rehearsed attitudes than objects for which they had not (Blascovich, et al, 1993).…”
Section: Problems With a Strong "Attitudes As Constructions" Perspectivementioning
confidence: 95%
“…Additional support for the link between attitudinal expression and accessibility was drawn from a study where participants evaluated paintings (Fazio, Blascovich, & Driscoll, 1992). Again, response latency was used to demonstrate differences in ease of accessibility, thus demonstrating the robustness of the link to attitudinal expression and its potential application to all manner of attitude objects.…”
Section: Attitudesmentioning
confidence: 99%