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      Decision Making of Maximizers and Satisficers Based on Collaborative Explanations

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          Abstract

          Rating-based summary statistics are ubiquitous in e-commerce, and often are crucial components in personalized recommendation mechanisms. Largely left unexplored, however, is the issue to what extent the descriptives of rating distributions influence the decision making of online consumers. We conducted a conjoint experiment to explore how different summarizations of rating distributions (i.e., in the form of the number of ratings, mean, variance, skewness or the origin of the ratings) impact users' decision making. Results from over 200 participants indicate that users are primarily guided by the mean and the number of ratings and to a lesser degree by the variance, and the origin of a rating. We also looked into the maximizing behavioral tendencies of our participants, and found that in particular participants scoring high on the Decision Difficulty subscale displayed other sensitivities regarding the way in which rating distributions were summarized than others.

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          Most cited references27

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          A Behavioral Model of Rational Choice

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            Maximizing versus satisficing: happiness is a matter of choice.

            Can people feel worse off as the options they face increase? The present studies suggest that some people--maximizers--can. Study 1 reported a Maximization Scale, which measures individual differences in desire to maximize. Seven samples revealed negative correlations between maximization and happiness, optimism, self-esteem, and life satisfaction, and positive correlations between maximization and depression, perfectionism, and regret. Study 2 found maximizers less satisfied than nonmaximizers (satisficers) with consumer decisions, and more likely to engage in social comparison. Study 3 found maximizers more adversely affected by upward social comparison. Study 4 found maximizers more sensitive to regret and less satisfied in an ultimatum bargaining game. The interaction between maximizing and choice is discussed in terms of regret, adaptation, and self-blame.
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              Do online reviews matter? — An empirical investigation of panel data

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                29 May 2018
                Article
                1805.11537
                ab99feb3-32ad-4189-8c20-7f31b97a99aa

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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                Custom metadata
                cs.IR cs.HC

                Information & Library science,Human-computer-interaction
                Information & Library science, Human-computer-interaction

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