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How do investors make predictions? Insights from analogical reasoning research
19
Citations
35
References
2000
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingDo InvestorsLiteral Similarity ReasoningSocial SciencesInvestor Decision MakingBehavioral FinanceManagementDecision TheoryPlausible ReasoningCognitive ScienceStatistical ThinkingReasoning SystemReasoning About ActionStrategyStrategic ManagementFinanceReasoningKnowledge IntegrationKnowledge ReasoningBusinessEpistemologyBusiness StrategyKnowledge ManagementDecision ScienceNovel Company
Previous work on investor decision making has focused almost exclusively on information specific to the company being judged. Consequently, every decision is viewed as a novel event, disconnected from the investor's existing knowledge. In this study, the analogical reasoning literature provides the theoretical support for arguing that investors frequently utilize existing knowledge as a basis for generating predictions about a company's future. The specific proposal is that investors transfer their existing knowledge via two different forms of analogical reasoning. The first, relational reasoning, is based primarily on structural correspondence between a novel company and an existing schema. The second, literal similarity reasoning, is based primarily on surface correspondence of a novel company and a previously encountered company. Our theoretical framework is tested in a study in which experienced investors predict the outcome of a novel company's strategy after reading about the experiences of other companies who implemented a similar strategy. The results are consistent with the occurrence of both relational and literal similarity reasoning, with relational reasoning emerging as the dominant approach to generating investors' predictions. Copyright © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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