Creating menus to influence others. The Journal of

Chapter 10, Problem 33E

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QUESTION:

Creating menus to influence others. The Journal of Consumer Research (Mar. 2003) published a study on influencing the choices of others by offering undesirable alternatives In one experiment conducted by the researcher, 96 subjects were asked to imagine that they had just moved to an apartment with two others and that they were shopping for a new appliance (e.g., a television, a microwave oven). Each subject was asked to create a menu of three brand choices for his or her roommates; then subjects were randomly assigned (in equal numbers) to one of three different “goal” conditions: (1) Create the menu in order to influence roommates to buy a preselected brand, (2) create the menu in order to influence roommates to buy a brand of your choice, and (3) create the menu with no intent to influence roommates. The researcher theorized that the menus created to influence others would likely include undesirable alternative brands. Consequently, the number of menus in each goal condition that was consistent with the theory was determined. The data are summarized in the accompanying table and saved in the MENU3 file. Analyze the data for the purpose of determining whether the proportion of subjects who select menus consistent with the theory depends on the goal condition. Use \(\alpha\ =\ .01\).

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QUESTION:

Creating menus to influence others. The Journal of Consumer Research (Mar. 2003) published a study on influencing the choices of others by offering undesirable alternatives In one experiment conducted by the researcher, 96 subjects were asked to imagine that they had just moved to an apartment with two others and that they were shopping for a new appliance (e.g., a television, a microwave oven). Each subject was asked to create a menu of three brand choices for his or her roommates; then subjects were randomly assigned (in equal numbers) to one of three different “goal” conditions: (1) Create the menu in order to influence roommates to buy a preselected brand, (2) create the menu in order to influence roommates to buy a brand of your choice, and (3) create the menu with no intent to influence roommates. The researcher theorized that the menus created to influence others would likely include undesirable alternative brands. Consequently, the number of menus in each goal condition that was consistent with the theory was determined. The data are summarized in the accompanying table and saved in the MENU3 file. Analyze the data for the purpose of determining whether the proportion of subjects who select menus consistent with the theory depends on the goal condition. Use \(\alpha\ =\ .01\).

ANSWER:

Step 1 of 2

 Select menus consistent with theory and the goal condition are independent.

 Select menus consistent with theory and the goal conditions are dependent.

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