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When Do Losses Loom Larger than Gains?

Ariely Dan - ; HuberJoel - ; Wertenbroch Klaus - ;

In defining limits to loss aversion, Novemsky and Kahneman (2005) offer important new data and a needed summary of appropriate ways to think about loss aversion. In this comment to Novemsky and Kahneman's article, the authors consider the new empirical results that involve probabilistic buying and selling, suggesting caution in generalizing the results to nonprobabilistic commerce. The authors expand Novemsky and Kahneman's summary by exploring two critical constructs that help define the boundaries of loss aversion: emotional attachment and cognitive perspective. Emotional attachment alters loss aversion by moderating the degree to which parting with an item involves a loss, whereas shifts in cognitive perspective explain why items typically viewed as a loss are given more or less weight. The goal is to use these constructs to characterize more specifically contexts in which losses loom larger than gains and to suggest specific ways that research into loss aversion could evolve.


Ketersediaan

Call NumberLocationAvailable
JM4202PSB lt.dasar - Pascasarjana1
PenerbitChicago: American Marketing Association 2005
EdisiVol. 42, No. 2 (May, 2005), pp. 134-138
SubjekProspect theory
Risk Perception
Cognitive biases in marketing
ISBN/ISSN0022-2437
KlasifikasiNONE
Deskripsi Fisik5 p,
Info Detail SpesifikJournal of Marketing
Other Version/RelatedTidak tersedia versi lain
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