TY - JOUR
T1 - Affect and Cognition in Attitude Formation toward Familiar and Unfamiliar Attitude Objects
AU - van Giesen, R.I.
AU - Fischer, A.R.H.
AU - van Dijk, H.
AU - van Trijp, J.C.M.
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - At large attitudes are built on earlier experience with the attitude object. If earlier experiences
are not available, as is the case for unfamiliar attitude objects such as new technologies,
no stored evaluations exist. Yet, people are still somehow able to construct attitudes
on the spot. Depending on the familiarity of the attitude object, attitudes may find their basis
more in affect or cognition. The current paper investigates differences in reliance on affect
or cognition in attitude formation toward familiar and unfamiliar realistic attitude objects. In
addition, individual differences in reliance on affect (high faith in intuition) or cognition (high
need for cognition) are taken into account. In an experimental survey among Dutch consumers
(N = 1870), we show that, for unfamiliar realistic attitude objects, people rely more on
affect than cognition. For familiar attitude objects where both affective and cognitive evaluations
are available, high need for cognition leads to more reliance on cognition, and high
faith in intuition leads to more reliance on affect, reflecting the influence of individually preferred
thinking style. For people with high need for cognition, cognition has a higher influence
on overall attitude for both familiar and unfamiliar realistic attitude objects. On the
other hand, affect is important for people with high faith in intuition for both familiar and unfamiliar
attitude objects and for people with low faith in intuition for unfamiliar attitude objects;
this shows that preferred thinking style is less influential for unfamiliar objects. By comparing
attitude formation for familiar and unfamiliar realistic attitude objects, this research contributes
to understanding situations in which affect or cognition is the better predictor of overall
attitudes.
AB - At large attitudes are built on earlier experience with the attitude object. If earlier experiences
are not available, as is the case for unfamiliar attitude objects such as new technologies,
no stored evaluations exist. Yet, people are still somehow able to construct attitudes
on the spot. Depending on the familiarity of the attitude object, attitudes may find their basis
more in affect or cognition. The current paper investigates differences in reliance on affect
or cognition in attitude formation toward familiar and unfamiliar realistic attitude objects. In
addition, individual differences in reliance on affect (high faith in intuition) or cognition (high
need for cognition) are taken into account. In an experimental survey among Dutch consumers
(N = 1870), we show that, for unfamiliar realistic attitude objects, people rely more on
affect than cognition. For familiar attitude objects where both affective and cognitive evaluations
are available, high need for cognition leads to more reliance on cognition, and high
faith in intuition leads to more reliance on affect, reflecting the influence of individually preferred
thinking style. For people with high need for cognition, cognition has a higher influence
on overall attitude for both familiar and unfamiliar realistic attitude objects. On the
other hand, affect is important for people with high faith in intuition for both familiar and unfamiliar
attitude objects and for people with low faith in intuition for unfamiliar attitude objects;
this shows that preferred thinking style is less influential for unfamiliar objects. By comparing
attitude formation for familiar and unfamiliar realistic attitude objects, this research contributes
to understanding situations in which affect or cognition is the better predictor of overall
attitudes.
U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0141790
DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0141790
M3 - Article
SN - 1932-6203
VL - 10
JO - PLoS ONE
JF - PLoS ONE
IS - 10
M1 - e0141790
ER -