APA 6th Edition Ritoša, A. i Bajšanski, I. (2015). Učinak broja opcija na promjenu preferencija uslijed odluke. Društvena istraživanja, 24 (2), 281-300. https://doi.org/10.5559/di.24.2.06
MLA 8th Edition Ritoša, Andrea i Igor Bajšanski. "Učinak broja opcija na promjenu preferencija uslijed odluke." Društvena istraživanja, vol. 24, br. 2, 2015, str. 281-300. https://doi.org/10.5559/di.24.2.06. Citirano 05.03.2021.
Chicago 17th Edition Ritoša, Andrea i Igor Bajšanski. "Učinak broja opcija na promjenu preferencija uslijed odluke." Društvena istraživanja 24, br. 2 (2015): 281-300. https://doi.org/10.5559/di.24.2.06
Harvard Ritoša, A., i Bajšanski, I. (2015). 'Učinak broja opcija na promjenu preferencija uslijed odluke', Društvena istraživanja, 24(2), str. 281-300. https://doi.org/10.5559/di.24.2.06
Vancouver Ritoša A, Bajšanski I. Učinak broja opcija na promjenu preferencija uslijed odluke. Društvena istraživanja [Internet]. 2015 [pristupljeno 05.03.2021.];24(2):281-300. https://doi.org/10.5559/di.24.2.06
IEEE A. Ritoša i I. Bajšanski, "Učinak broja opcija na promjenu preferencija uslijed odluke", Društvena istraživanja, vol.24, br. 2, str. 281-300, 2015. [Online]. https://doi.org/10.5559/di.24.2.06
Sažetak Decisions not only reflect but also shape preferences.
Making a choice between two equally attractive options
alters the preferences in a way that the evaluation of a
chosen option increases, while the evaluation of a non-
-chosen option decreases. Preference change is a way of
dealing with choice-induced cognitive dissonance. The aim
of this study was to examine whether the choice-induced
preference change differs when the number of options
in the choice task is considered. Research was carried
out on 57 subjects. Their task was to evaluate the
attractiveness of travel destinations, choose between two,
four or six equally or unequally attractive options, and then
to re-evaluate them. It was found that after making a choice
between equally attractive options, the chosen options
became more attractive. This effect was stronger in the tasks
with more options. The desirability of rejected options was
lower after the choice was made, and this effect was stronger
in the tasks with a smaller number of options. With easy
choices, there was no significant difference in preference
change for chosen and non-chosen alternatives. These
findings support the idea that decisions shape preferences.