Decision contamination in the wild: Sequential dependencies in online review ratings

Current judgments are systematically biased by prior judgments. Such biases occur in ways that seem to reflect the cognitive system’s ability to adapt to statistical regularities within the environment. These cognitive sequential dependencies have primarily been evaluated in carefully controlled lab...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dale, R. (Author), Jones, M.N (Author), Vinson, D.W (Author)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer New York LLC 2019
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Online Access:View Fulltext in Publisher
Description
Summary:Current judgments are systematically biased by prior judgments. Such biases occur in ways that seem to reflect the cognitive system’s ability to adapt to statistical regularities within the environment. These cognitive sequential dependencies have primarily been evaluated in carefully controlled laboratory experiments. In this study, we used these well-known laboratory findings to guide our analysis of two datasets, consisting of over 2.2 million business review ratings from Yelp and 4.2 million movie and television review ratings from Amazon. We explored how within-reviewer ratings are influenced by previous ratings. Our findings suggest a contrast effect: Current ratings are systematically biased away from prior ratings, and the magnitude of this bias decays over several reviews. This work is couched within a broader program that aims to use well-established laboratory findings to guide our understanding of patterns in naturally occurring and large-scale behavioral data. © 2018, The Psychonomic Society, Inc.
ISBN:1554351X (ISSN)
DOI:10.3758/s13428-018-1175-8