Article ID: | iaor20012629 |
Country: | United States |
Volume: | 28 |
Issue: | 2 |
Start Page Number: | 421 |
End Page Number: | 442 |
Publication Date: | Mar 1997 |
Journal: | Decision Sciences |
Authors: | Tuttle B., Stocks M.H. |
When making business decisions, people generally receive some form of guidance. Often, this guidance might be in die form of instructions about which inputs to the decision are most important. Alternatively, it might be outcome feedback concerning the appropriateness of their decisions. When people receive guidance in making difficult judgements, it is important that they do not confuse this guidance with insight into their own decision models. This study examined whether people confuse their actual decision model with task information and outcome feedback. Subjects predicted the likelihood that various hypothetical companies would experience financial distress and then reported the decision models they believed they had used. Their reported models were compared with their actual models as estimated by a regression of the subjects' predictions on the inputs to their decisions. In a 2x2 factorial design, some subjects were provided with task information regarding the relative importance of each input to their decisions while others were not. Some subjects were provided with outcome feedback regarding the quality of their decisions while others were not. The subjects tended to confuse the task information and outcome feedback with their actual decision models. Implications for the results are discussed.