Guilt in decision making. The effect of guilt emotion on how a decision maker focuses on the

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Guilt in decision making. The effect of guilt emotion on how a decision maker focuses on the problem was investigated in the Journal of Behavioral Decision Making

(Jan. 2007). A sample of 77 volunteer students participated in one portion of the experiment, where each was randomly assigned to one of three emotional states (guilt, anger, or neutral) through a reading/writing task. Immediately after LO4 the task, the students were presented with a decision problem where the stated option has predominantly negative features (e.g., spending money on repairing a very old car). Prior to making the decision, the researchers asked each subject to list possible, more attractive, alternatives.
The researchers then compared the mean number of alternatives listed across the three emotional states with an analysis of variance for a completely randomized design. A partial ANOVA summary table is shown below.
Source df F-value p-value Emotional State 2 22.68 0.001 Error 74 Total 76

a. What conclusion can you draw from the ANOVA results?

b. A multiple comparisons of means procedure was applied to the data using an experimentwise error rate of .05. Explain what the .05 represents.

c. The multiple comparisons yielded the following results.
What conclusion can you draw?
Sample mean: 1.90 2.17 4.75 Emotional State: Angry Neutral Guilt

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Statistics

ISBN: 9781292161556

13th Global Edition

Authors: James T. McClave And Terry T Sincich

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