i wonder if part of the reason folks who create "art" (be is visual, text, music, or whatever) using generative AI are so insistent and defensive of it being theirs has a big part to due with the IKEA effect
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i wonder if part of the reason folks who create "art" (be is visual, text, music, or whatever) using generative AI are so insistent and defensive of it being theirs has a big part to due with the IKEA effect
In Psychology there’s this bias called the IKEA Effect – where people place a higher value on items they build themselves compared to items they did not construct.
NEW VIDEO: Why do you love things more when you build them yourself? It all has to do with the IKEA Effect.
It’s a bias in psychology where people place a higher value on items they build themselves compared to items they didn’t construct. Since I’d recently ordered new furniture, I thought I’d put this IKEA Effect into practice.
Curiosity Daily Podcast: Gifts Requiring Assembly Are More Treasured, Why You May Not Be Hard To Shop For, and Types of Perfectionists
Learn why people value an item more if they put it together themselves; why you might not be as hard to shop for as you think you are; and three types of perfectionism that might be ruining your life.
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To Give a Gift They'll Treasure, Go With "Some Assembly Required" — https://curiosity.im/2RWXQk2
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What does the Ikea Effect mean for product and service designers? By having users build a piece of a product or service, it’s possible we could get them to think of the product or service as being more valuable than they otherwise would.
Co-creation: the power of conversations [2 of 4]
Co-creation: the power of conversations [2 of 4]
The Co-creation process © C. Bughi
Co-creation Vs crowd creation
So, when looking back at what media often portrays as co-creation, the confusion becomes evident.
Co-creation is no co-production: many initiatives labelled as co-creation are actually co-production experiences, which are experiences where customers participate to the production and delivery of the product or service: the…
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It's the fruit of your labor. And that is really the idea behind the Ikea Effect." Most of us intuitively believe that the things we labor at are the things we love. Mochon and his colleagues, Michael Norton at the Harvard Business School and Dan Ariely at Duke University, have turned that concept on its head. What if, they asked, it isn't love that leads to labor, but labor that leads to love? In a series of experiments, they have demonstrated that people attach greater value to things they built than if the very same product was built by someone else. And in new experiments published recently, they've discovered why it happens: Building your own stuff boosts your feelings of pride and competence, and also signals to others that you are competent. There is an insidious element here: People made to feel incompetent may be more vulnerable to the Ikea Effect. On the other hand, Mochon has found, when people are given a self-esteem boost, they appear to be less interested in demonstrating to themselves and to others that they are competent.
Why You Love That Ikea Table, Even If It's Crooked : NPR
It seems like everyone, at some point, has struggled through the herculean task of assembling pre-built furniture from places like IKEA, Target or Overstock.com. It’s never as easy as it seems in the store, the instructions are often impenetrable pictograms, and the results are rarely as sturdy as your expectations. The coffee table I bought after college has developed an incurable wobble, and the doors on a freestanding cabinet from just a few years ago are just ever so slightly askew, and never quite close right, no matter how many tiny adjustments I make. Why then am I so attached to my own personal island of misfit toys?