Decision Making in Information-Rich Environments: The Role of Information Structure
14 Pages Posted: 17 Jul 2006
Abstract
Today's consumers are often overloaded with information. This article argues that traditional approaches to measuring the amount of information in a choice set fail to account for important structural dimensions of information and may therefore incorrectly predict information overload. Two experiments show that a structural approach to measuring information, such as information theory, is better able to predict information overload and that information structure also has important implications for information acquisition. A Monte-Carlo simulation, in which decision rules are applied to multiple information environments, shows that the amount of information processing mediates the relationship between information structure and information overload.
Keywords: Decision Making, Information Overload, Information Theory, Experiments, Simulations
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Smart Agents: When Lower Search Costs for Quality Information Increase Price Sensitivity
By Kristin Diehl, Laura J. Kornish, ...
-
By Patricia M. West, Dan Ariely, ...
-
The Derived Demand for Advertising: A Theoretical and Empirical Investigation
By Isaac Ehrlich and Lawrence Fisher
-
Do We Care What Others Get? A Behaviorist Approach to Targeted Promotions
By Fred M. Feinberg, Aradhna Krishna, ...
-
By Gerald Häubl and Kyle B. Murray
-
Should Recommendation Agents Think Like People?
By Lerzan Aksoy, Paul N. Bloom, ...
-
The Effect of Cultural Orientation on Consumer Responses to Personalization
By Thomas Kramer, Suri Weisfeld-spolter, ...