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Fooled by heteroscedastic randomness: local consistency breeds extremity in price-based quality inferences

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<mark>Journal publication date</mark>2014
<mark>Journal</mark>Journal of Consumer Research
Issue number4
Volume41
Number of pages16
Pages (from-to)978-994
Publication StatusPublished
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

In some product categories, low-priced brands are consistently of low quality, but high-priced brands can be anything from terrible to excellent. In other product categories, high-priced brands are consistently of high quality, but quality of low-priced brands varies widely. Three experiments demonstrate that such heteroscedasticity leads to more extreme price-based quality predictions. This finding suggests that quality inferences do not only stem from what consumers have learned about the average level of quality at different price points through exemplar memory or rule abstraction. Instead, quality predictions are also based on learning about the covariation between price and quality. That is, consumers inappropriately conflate the conditional mean of quality with the predictability of quality. We discuss implications for theories of quantitative cue learning and selective information processing, for pricing strategies and luxury branding, and for our understanding of the emergence and persistence of erroneous beliefs and stereotypes beyond the consumer realm.