An illusion of control modulates the reluctance to tempt fate

Journal Title: Judgment and Decision Making - Year 2011, Vol 6, Issue 7

Abstract

The tempting fate effect is that the probability of a fateful outcome is deemed higher following an action that “tempts” the outcome than in the absence of such an action. In this paper we evaluate the hypothesis that the effect is due to an illusion of control induced by a causal framing of the situation. Causal frames require that the action make a difference to an outcome and that the action precedes the outcome. If an illusion of control modulates the reluctance to tempt fate, then actions that make a difference to well-being and that occur prior to the outcome should tempt fate most strongly. In Experiments 1–3 we varied whether the action makes a difference and the temporal order of action and outcome. In Experiment 4 we tested whether an action can tempt fate if all outcomes are negative. The results of all four experiments supported our hypothesis that the tempting fate effect depends on a causal construal that gives rise to a false sense of control.

Authors and Affiliations

Chloe L. Swirsky, Philip M. Fernbach, and Steven A. Sloman

Keywords

Related Articles

Variations on anchoring: Sequential anchoring revisited

The anchoring effect, the assimilation of judgment toward a previously considered value, has been shown using various experimental paradigms. We used several variations of the sequential anchoring paradigm, in which a nu...

One-reason decision making in risky choice? A closer look at the priority heuristic

Although many models for risky choices between gambles assume that information is somehow integrated, the recently proposed priority heuristic (PH) claims that choices are based on one piece of information only. That is,...

Criteria for performance evaluation

Using a cognitive task (mental calculation) and a perceptual-motor task (stylized golf putting), we examined differential proficiency using the CWS index and several other quantitative measures of performance. The CWS in...

Fast Acceptance by Common Experience: FACE-recognition in Schelling’s model of neighborhood segregation

Schelling (1969, 1971a,b, 1978) observed that macro-level patterns do not necessarily reflect micro-level intentions, desires or goals. In his classic model on neighborhood segregation which initiated a large and influen...

The value of a smile: Facial expression affects ultimatum-game responses

Abstract: In social interaction, the facial expression of an opponent contains information that may influence the interaction. We asked whether facial expression affects decision-making in the ultimatum game. In this two...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP677852
  • DOI -
  • Views 128
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Chloe L. Swirsky, Philip M. Fernbach, and Steven A. Sloman (2011). An illusion of control modulates the reluctance to tempt fate. Judgment and Decision Making, 6(7), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-677852