Audience Decision-Making Expertise 19
before making their decisions.^89 Similar expert/novice differences regarding missing benchmark
information have been reported among other types of consumers.^90 However, even experts may
not take the time necessary to infer missing benchmark information if the amount of miss-
ing information is large or if they are not confi dent in their ability to make the inferences
accurately.^91
Decision Schemata of Expert Audiences
Decision Schemata: The Audience’s Decision-Making Framework
When experts’ decision criteria and benchmarks are plotted out, they form a grid or decision
matrix. Table 1.1 shows an example of a decision matrix for deciding on a laptop computer
in 2015. The fi rst column of the matrix lists possible decision criteria. The fi rst row indicates
the recommended laptop and benchmark, or alternative, laptops. The cells of the matrix give
the values for the recommended and benchmark laptops. But do such matrix representations
have any psychological reality? Do they refl ect something about the underlying structure of
decision-making expertise? Research suggests the answer is yes. Expert decision makers appear
to have decision-specifi c knowledge structures,^92 or mental representations, stored in their
long-term memories that correspond to decision matrices. It is these knowledge structures that
lead experts to mentally represent each alternative they consider as values along a number of
attributes or decision criteria.^93
Cognitive scientists call such knowledge structures schemata.^94 Schemata are mental frameworks
that reside in an expert’s long-term memory and into which new information can be fi tted and
made sense of.^95 Other terms for schemata include scripts ,^96 frames ,^97 mental models ,^98 templates ,^99
and knowledge representations.^100
Some scientists believe schemata are stored in the prefrontal cortex of the brain.^101 Other sci-
entists fi nd evidence for schemata being distributed over different areas of the cortex.^102 More
recently, neuroscientists have demonstrated that the medial prefrontal cortex, interacting with the
hippocampus, is involved in assimilating new information into existing schemata and in retrieving
it later as needed for decision making.^103
Schemata, like the decision matrix illustrated in Table 1.1 , consist of slots that indicate the
expert’s knowledge relevant to a particular decision as well as empty slots that can be fi lled with
situation-specifi c information called slot values.^104 In Table 1.1 the slot values for the laptop
TABLE 1.1 Decision Matrices Incorporate Both Decision Criteria and Benchmarks
DECISION
CRITERIA
RECOMMENDATION
Laptop under consideration
BENCHMARK 1
Comparable laptop
BENCHMARK 2
Current laptop
Year, make, and
model
2015 13”
Apple MacBook Air
2015 13”
Apple MacBook Pro
with Retina display
2014 11”
Apple MacBook Air
Processor speed 1.6GHz 2.9GHz 1.3GHz
Memory 4GB SDRAM 8GB SDRAM 4GB SDRAM
Storage 256GB Flash Storage 512GB Flash Storage 128GB Flash Storage
Display quality Very good Excellent Very good
Retail price $1,200 $1,800 $1,000 (new)