"Initial Reactions: Rethinking the Efficacy of Current Contractual Prac" by Sarah E. Wellard
College of Science and Health Theses and Dissertations

Date of Award

Fall 11-19-2024

Degree Type

Dissertation

Degree Name

Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Department

Psychology

First Advisor

Jessica Choplin, PhD

Second Advisor

Sandra Virtue, PhD

Third Advisor

David Allbritton, PhD

Abstract

To protect consumers from unfair contracts, legislatures have implemented measures requiring consumers to signal specific agreement to crucial clauses. One such common practice is requiring consumers to initial specific provisions within contracts. This dissertation investigates the efficacy of initialing and other secondary tasks in promoting consumer understanding and memory of contractual information. Through a series of three experimental studies, participants engaged in tasks involving initialing, semantic processing, or irrelevant letter-classification tasks while processing contract information. Contrary to predictions, the findings failed to show that initialing or other secondary tasks significantly improved consumer’s reported memory or understanding of contract terms, compared to scenarios without such tasks. Response time analyses across studies further indicated that while certain tasks may prolong cognitive processing, they did not yield statistically significant improvements in contract understanding. The failure to find evidence for the practical utility of current contractual practices challenges current legally-based assumptions, and raises questions about whether initialing may represent a procedural formality rather than a meaningful safeguard.

These findings, viewed through the lens of Dual Process Theory and task-switching paradigms, may provide insight into the cognitive demands imposed by secondary tasks, and the possibility that they may undercut the intended benefits of initialing in enhancing consumer protection. The implications of these findings are discussed in terms of their potential impact on consumer protection law and the need for reevaluating traditional practices in contract formation to better align with principles of consumer empowerment and legal clarity.

SLP Collection

no

Included in

Psychology Commons

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