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Range‐Dependent Attribute Weighting in Consumer Choice: An Experimental Test
21
Citations
23
References
2022
Year
Consumer UncertaintyBehavioral Decision MakingChoice TheoryRelative ImportanceConsumer ResearchRange‐dependent Attribute WeightingChoice ModelRelative ThinkingManagementExperimental EconomicsConsumer BehaviorDecision TheoryConsumer ChoiceEconomicsConsumer Decision MakingBehavioral SciencesMarketingBehavioral EconomicsBusinessDecision ScienceConsumer Attitude
This paper investigates whether the range of an attribute's outcomes in the choice set alters its relative importance. I derive distinguishing predictions of two prominent theories of range‐dependent attribute weighting: the focusing model of Kőszegi and Szeidl (2013) and the relative thinking model of Bushong, Rabin, and Schwartzstein (2021). I test these predictions in a laboratory experiment in which I vary the prices of high‐ and low‐quality variants of multiple products. The data provide clear evidence of choice‐set dependence consistent with relative thinking: price increases that expand the range of prices in the choice set lead to more purchases. Structural estimates imply economically meaningful effect sizes: the average participant was willing to pay around 17% more when a seemingly irrelevant option is added to their choice set.
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