Effects of Task, Interval and Order of Presentation on Time Estimations

1971 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 101-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stewart Cohen

60 male adults estimated time passage for achievement-oriented and unfilled tasks. Significant task, interval, and order effects were associated with trial and total temporal estimations.

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 78-83
Author(s):  
Monica Rahardian Ary Helmina ◽  
Imam Ghozali ◽  
Jaka Isgiyarta ◽  
Ibnu Sutomo

This research focuses on investor decision making on information provided by the company. Belief-adjustment models emphasize the order of presentation of information. Order effects occur when decisions made by individuals differ after receiving evidence in a different order. In order of evidence, the characteristics of the evidence are mixed between confirmative (positive) information and unconfirmed (negative) information.The participants of this study are investors who have investment accounts. The design of the 2x4 experimental method is divided into analysis of factor 2 (presentation pattern) x 4 (information value), which aims to test that the presentation of information in step by step (SBS) will have a better impact than end of sequence (EOS). There are 8 combinations of instruments contain patterns and information values that are used as a source of stock valuation. ANOVA analysis is used for this study. The results showed that there was an effect of the pattern of information delivery in investment decision making when the SBS and EOS disclosure patterns in hypothesis 1 and hypothesis 2. The results of hypothesis 3 did not support the belief adjustment model theory.


1964 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 607-610 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert E. Lana

Groups who have been familiarized with the topic of a communication or who have had their opinion on a topic tapped by questionnaire, have yielded primacy effects when confronted with opposed communications on the same topic. Two intact groups of Ss, both of which were familiar with the two topics of the communications, were exposed to opposed arguments on various aspects of these topics. There were no significant order effects, nor did either group change opinion regarding their position on the topic. Since no primacy effect resulted, it is concluded that intact groups familiar with a topic may also be committed to a particular position or opinion regarding that topic and hence yield no order effects of any kind.


2021 ◽  
pp. 089443932199277
Author(s):  
Patricia Hadler

Cognitive pretesting is an essential method of piloting questionnaires and ensuring quality of survey data. Web probing has emerged as an innovative method of cognitive pretesting, especially for cross-cultural and web surveys. The order of presenting questions in cognitive pretesting can differ from the order of presentation in the later survey. Yet empirical evidence is missing whether the order of presenting survey questions influences the answers to open-ended probing questions. The present study examines the effect of question order on web probing in the United States and Germany. Results indicate that probe responses are not strongly impacted by question order. However, both content and consistency of probe responses may differ cross-culturally. Implications for cognitive pretesting are discussed.


2006 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-83 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Favere-Marchesi

This study examined whether auditors, when they are processing mixed evidence, take into consideration the chronological order of the evidence (giving rise to what this study refers to as a trend effect), or if their evaluations are influenced primarily by the order of presentation (giving rise to what the audit literature refers to as a recency effect). The study's primary objective was to determine whether awareness of the temporal order of evidence would prevent auditors from placing more weight on evidence that they most recently processed (i.e., whether the trend effect dominates the recency effect). Auditors were given an experimental task of going-concern assessment. Auditors evaluating undated mixed evidence exhibited recency effects similar in magnitude to those shown by auditors who were asked to evaluate dated mixed evidence, in which the presentation order was consistent with temporal order. However, auditors evaluating evidence in which temporal order and presentation order were varied orthogonally took into consideration the chronological order of the evidence. This, in turn, led to a significant reduction in the effect of recency. Additional analysis indicates that auditors who evaluated dated mixed evidence chose audit opinions consistent with the trend reflected by the chronology of the evidence.


2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Franziska Bocklisch ◽  
Josef F. Krems

1997 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Czarnolewski ◽  
John Eliot ◽  
Jennifer Rinehart
Keyword(s):  

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