Agency Information Collection Activities; Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request, 32470-32472 [2010-13691]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 109 / Tuesday, June 8, 2010 / Notices
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The meeting will begin at 9 a.m. and
is expected to conclude at 12:30 p.m.
The Martin Building is located on C
Street, NW., between 20th and 21st
Streets.
The Council’s function is to advise
the Board on the exercise of the Board’s
responsibilities under various consumer
financial services laws and on other
matters on which the Board seeks its
advice. Time permitting, the Council
will discuss the following topics:
• Home Mortgage Disclosure Act
(HMDA)
In the context of the Board’s review of
Regulation C, which implements
HMDA, members will discuss whether
the 2002 revisions to Regulation C,
which required lenders to report
mortgage pricing data, helped provide
useful and accurate information about
the mortgage market; the need for
additional data and other
improvements; and what emerging
issues in the mortgage market may
warrant additional research.
• Community Reinvestment Act
(CRA)
Members will discuss the future of the
Community Reinvestment Act,
including possible changes in light of
developments in the financial services
industry and issues associated with the
foreclosure crisis.
• Foreclosure Issues
Members will discuss loss-mitigation
efforts, including the Administration’s
Making Home Affordable program,
neighborhood stabilization initiatives
and challenges, and other issues related
to foreclosures.
Reports by committees and other
matters initiated by Council members
also may be discussed.
Persons wishing to submit views to
the Council on any of the above topics
may do so by sending written
statements to Jennifer Kerslake,
Secretary of the Consumer Advisory
Council, Division of Consumer and
Community Affairs, Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System,
Washington, DC 20551. Information
about this meeting may be obtained
from Ms. Kerslake at 202–452–6470.
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, June 3, 2010.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2010–13650 Filed 6–7–10; 8:45 am]
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FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Submission for OMB
Review; Comment Request
AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission
(‘‘FTC’’ or ‘‘Commission’’).
ACTION: Notice.
SUMMARY: The FTC intends to conduct
an exploratory study on consumer
susceptibility to fraudulent and
deceptive marketing. This research will
be conducted to further the FTC’s
mission of protecting consumers from
unfair and deceptive marketing. Before
gathering this information, the FTC is
seeking public comments on its
proposed research. The information
collection requirements described below
are being submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (‘‘OMB’’) for
review, as required by the Paperwork
Reduction Act (‘‘PRA’’).
DATES: Comments must be submitted on
or before July 8, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties are
invited to submit written comments
electronically or in paper form by
following the instructions in the
Request for Comments part of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section
below. Comments in electronic form
should be submitted by using the
following weblink: (https://
public.commentworks.com/ftc/
fraudexperiment2) and following the
instructions on the web-based form).
Comments filed in paper form should
refer to ‘‘Fraud Susceptibility
Experiment, FTC File No. P095501,’’
both in the text and on the envelope,
and should be mailed or delivered to the
following address: Federal Trade
Commission, Office of the Secretary,
Room H-135 (Annex J), 600
Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.,
Washington, DC 20580, in the manner
detailed in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section below.
All comments should additionally be
submitted to: Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Office of
Management and Budget, Attention:
Desk Officer for the Federal Trade
Commission. Comments should be
submitted via facsimile to (202) 3955167 because U.S. postal mail at the
OMB is subject to delays due to
heightened security precautions.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information
should be addressed to Patrick
McAlvanah, Economist, Bureau of
Economics, Federal Trade Commission,
600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Mail
Stop NJ-4136, Washington, DC 20580.
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Telephone: (202) 326-2974; e-mail:
(fraudexperiment@ftc.gov).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Request for Comments:
Interested parties are invited to
submit written comments electronically
or in paper form. Comments should
refer to ‘‘Fraud Susceptibility
Experiment, FTC File No. P095501’’ to
facilitate the organization of comments.
Please note that your comment —
including your name and your state —
will be placed on the public record of
this proceeding, including on the
publicly accessible FTC Website, at
(https://www.ftc.gov/os/
publiccomments.shtm).
Because comments will be made
public, they should not include any
sensitive personal information, such as
an individual’s Social Security Number;
date of birth; driver’s license number or
other state identification number, or
foreign country equivalent; passport
number; financial account number; or
credit or debit card number. Comments
also should not include any sensitive
health information, such as medical
records or other individually
identifiable health information. In
addition, comments should not include
any ‘‘[t]rade secret or any commercial or
financial information which is obtained
from any person and which is privileged
or confidential’’ as provided in Section
6(f) of the Federal Trade Commission
Act (‘‘FTC Act’’), 15 U.S.C. 46(f), and
FTC Rule 4.10(a)(2), 16 CFR 4.10(a)(2).
Comments containing material for
which confidential treatment is
requested must be filed in paper form,
must be clearly labeled ‘‘Confidential,’’
and must comply with FTC Rule 4.9(c),
16 CFR 4.9(c).1
Because paper mail addressed to the
FTC is subject to delay due to
heightened security screening, please
consider submitting your comments in
electronic form. Comments filed in
electronic form should be submitted by
using the following weblink: (https://
public.commentworks.com/ftc/
fraudexperiment2) (and following the
instructions on the web-based form). To
ensure that the Commission considers
an electronic comment, you must file it
on the web-based form at the weblink:
(https://public.commentworks.com/ftc/
fraudexperiment2). If this Notice
1 The comment must be accompanied by an
explicit request for confidential treatment,
including the factual and legal basis for the request,
and must identify the specific portions of the
comment to be withheld from the public record.
The request will be granted or denied by the
Commission’s General Counsel, consistent with
applicable law and the public interest. See FTC
Rule 4.9(c), 16 CFR 4.9(c).
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 109 / Tuesday, June 8, 2010 / Notices
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with NOTICES
appears at (https://www.regulations.gov/
search/Regs/home.html#home), you
may also file an electronic comment
through that website. The Commission
will consider all comments that
regulations.gov forwards to it.
A comment filed in paper form
should include the ‘‘Fraud
Susceptibility Experiment, FTC File No.
P095501’’ reference both in the text and
on the envelope, and should be mailed
or delivered to the following address:
Federal Trade Commission, Office of the
Secretary, Room H-135 (Annex J), 600
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington,
DC 20580. The FTC is requesting that
any comment filed in paper form be sent
by courier or overnight service, if
possible, because U.S. postal mail in the
Washington area and at the Commission
is subject to delay due to heightened
security precautions.
The FTC Act and other laws the
Commission administers permit the
collection of public comments to
consider and use in this proceeding as
appropriate. The Commission will
consider all timely and responsive
public comments that it receives,
whether filed in paper or electronic
form. Comments received will be
available to the public on the FTC
Website, to the extent practicable, at
(https://www.ftc.gov/os/
publiccomments.shtm). As a matter of
discretion, the Commission makes every
effort to remove home contact
information for individuals from the
public comments it receives before
placing those comments on the FTC
Website. More information, including
routine uses permitted by the Privacy
Act, may be found in the FTC’s privacy
policy, at (https://www.ftc.gov/ftc/
privacy.shtm).
On June 11, 2009, the FTC sought
comment on the information collection
requirements associated with the
proposed Fraud Susceptibility
Experiment study.2 No comments were
received. Pursuant to the OMB
regulations, 5 CFR Part 1320, that
implement the PRA, 44 U.S.C. 35013521, the Commission is providing this
second opportunity for public comment.
All comments should be filed as
prescribed in the ADDRESSES section
above, and must be received on or
before July 8, 2010.
Background Information:
As part of its consumer protection
mission, the FTC has brought hundreds
of cases targeting fraud, and has
committed significant resources to
educational initiatives designed to
protect consumers. The Commission
2 74
FR 27794.
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hosted a Fraud Forum3 on February 2526, 2009 to examine fraud in the market
place. The Commission has also
conducted telephone surveys in 2003
and 2005 designed to measure the
proportion of the U.S. adult population
that has fallen victim to various
consumer frauds.4 Despite this,
surprisingly little is known about what
determines consumers’ susceptibility to
fraud. For example, the 2003 and 2005
FTC consumer fraud surveys found that
education was not a significant
predictor of fraud victimization.
Understanding when and why people
are vulnerable to fraud would better
inform the FTC’s substantial, ongoing
efforts to fight fraud through law
enforcement and consumer education.
Additional insights into how and why
people fall victim to fraud could also
help improve any future fraud surveys
the Commission may undertake. The
study announced in this notice is a
preliminary and exploratory step toward
facilitating those efforts. The study is
not intended to lead to enforcement
actions; rather, study results may aid the
FTC’s efforts to better target its
enforcement actions and consumer
education initiatives, and improve
future fraud surveys.
Economic and psychological
experiments have identified several
decision-making biases, such as
impulsivity, over-confidence, overoptimism, and loss aversion, that can
cause inaccurate assessments of the
risks, costs, and benefits of various
choices. FTC staff proposes to conduct
an economic laboratory experiment to
study whether these types of decision
biases are related to consumer
susceptibility to fraudulent or deceptive
marketing claims. Staff intends to study
consumers’ assessment of potentially
deceptive advertisements, in addition to
their assessment of non-deceptive
advertisements. Staff seeks to
understand which characteristics of
individuals and advertisements predict
consumers’ ability to differentiate
between apparently fraudulent materials
and apparently legitimate materials.
Pursuant to the OMB regulations, 5
CFR Part 1320, that implement the PRA,
44 U.S.C. 3501-21, the FTC is providing
this opportunity for public comment
3 Information on the Fraud Forum is available at:
(https://www.ftc.gov/bcp/workshops/fraudforum/
index.shtm).
4 The Commission has published two staff reports
describing the results of these surveys – Consumer
Fraud in the United States: An FTC Survey
(published August 2004 and available at (https://
www.ftc.gov/reports/consumerfraud/
040805confraudrpt.pdf) and Consumer Fraud in the
United States: The Second FTC Survey (published
in October 2007 and available at (https://
www.ftc.gov/opa/2007/10/fraud.pdf).
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32471
while requesting that OMB approve the
study. Under the PRA, federal agencies
must obtain OMB approval for each
collection of information they conduct
or sponsor. ‘‘Collection of information’’
means agency requests or requirements
that members of the public submit
reports, keep records, or provide
information to a third party. 44 U.S.C.
3502(3); 5 CFR 1320.3(c). All comments
should be filed as prescribed in the
ADDRESSES section above, and must be
received on or before July 8, 2010.
A. Description of the collection of
information and proposed use
The FTC proposes to conduct an
experiment in a university’s economics
laboratory with 250 subjects drawn from
the campus community.5 A sample of
250 persons enables random assignment
of subjects into different experimental
conditions of sufficient size for analytic
power. The sample is not intended to be
nationally representative, but will still
provide useful insights into consumer
susceptibility to fraud. In addition, five
to ten of these subjects will participate
in a pretest. Pretest subjects will
participate in an in-person interview
about the clarity and comprehensibility
of the instructions.
The study will gauge consumer
attitudes towards legitimate and
potentially fraudulent or deceptive
advertisements. Staff plans to ask
subjects to examine advertisements for
fraudulent products and report their
opinion about the credibility of the
advertisements. Staff also plans to ask
participants to rate the credibility of
advertisements for apparently legitimate
products to gauge how participants
distinguish between apparently
fraudulent product claims and
legitimate product claims. Staff plans to
measure consumer knowledge, risk
attitudes, impatience, and skepticism
using existing methods from economics
and psychology research. Staff intends
to measure consumer knowledge using
consumer literacy, financial literacy,
and numeracy questions6 in order to test
subjects’ marketplace understanding
and sophistication. Staff seeks to
determine if people with such
knowledge deem fraudulent
advertisements to be less credible than
legitimate advertisements. Staff plans to
measure subjects’ risk attitudes through
5 Staff has contracted with a faculty member of
George Mason University who will recruit the study
subjects and oversee and administer the
experiment.
6 Staff plans to use financial literacy and
numeracy measures such as in James Banks and Zoe
Oldfield, Understanding Pensions: Cognitive
Function, Numerical Ability and Retirement Saving,
Fiscal Studies, 2007, 28 (2).
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 109 / Tuesday, June 8, 2010 / Notices
a series of choices between smaller
certain amounts of money or larger risky
amounts.7 Staff intends to describe the
product to some subjects as creating
benefits, while presenting to other
subjects nearly identical information
depicted as a reduction in harm. Staff
intends to then test whether risk-averse
and loss-averse subjects are particularly
susceptible to fraudulent claims framed
as opportunities to escape losses.8 Staff
plans to measure subjects’ impatience
through a series of choices between
smaller monetary amounts received
sooner or larger amounts but received
later.9 Staff would then test to see if
impatient subjects are more susceptible
to fraudulent claims. Staff also plans to
elicit measures of optimism 10 and
skepticism 11 to determine their roles in
deeming advertisements, both of
fraudulent and legitimate products, as
credible. In addition, staff intends to
collect demographic and background
information from the surveyed subjects.
The FTC has contracted with the faculty
of a university-run experimental
economics laboratory to locate and
recruit subjects and conduct the
experiments.
Staff will pre-test the experimental
procedures with up to ten subjects to
ensure that the instructions provided to
participants are clear and
comprehensible, and that the
experimental procedures are workable.
Pre-test subjects will be drawn from the
same university subject pool as the
experiment’s subjects.
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B. Estimated Hours Burden
The FTC plans to seek information
from up to 250 respondents for
approximately 90 minutes each.
Allowing for pre-testing of the
instructions on as many as 10
7 Staff intends to use standard risk aversion
measurement methodologies akin to those in
Charles Holt and Susan Laury, Risk Aversion and
Incentive Effects, American Economic Review,
December 2002, 1644-1655.
8 Several academic articles report that people are
more willing to take identical risks over monetary
gambles if the risk is presented as an opportunity
to escape losses rather than as a chance to gain. Our
‘‘framing’’ methodologies emulate those in Amos
Tversky and Daniel Kahneman, The Framing of
Decisions and the Psychology of Choice, Science,
Vol. 211, No. 4481 (Jan. 30, 1981), 453-458.
9 Staff intends to use methodology similar to that
in Stephan Meier and Charles Sprenger, PresentBiased Preferences and Credit Card Borrowing,
American Economic Journal: Applied Economics
2010, 2:1, 193-210.
10 Staff plans to use standard questions similar to
those in Manju Puri and David Robinson, Optimism
and Economic Choice, Journal of Financial
Economics, 2007, Vol. 86, 71-99.
11 Staff plans to use the scale developed in Carl
Obermiller and Eric Spangenberg, Development of
a Scale to Measure Consumer Skepticism toward
Advertising, Journal of Consumer Psychology, Vol.
7, No. 2, 1998, 159-186.
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respondents, at an additional 30
minutes apiece, cumulative burden,
inclusive of the pre-testing, will total
approximately 380 hours.
C. Estimated Costs Burden
The cost per respondent should be
negligible. Participation will not require
start-up, capital, or labor expenditures
by respondents. The above-noted
contractor will recruit the student and
community member subjects to
participate in this study; subjects will be
asked to respond to an initial
recruitment email to participate
voluntarily. Staff will compensate all
subjects for their participation in the 90minute study. Subjects will receive
approximately $8 as a show-up fee; in
addition, they will have the opportunity
to earn more during the course of the
study based upon their responses to
various questions. Staff expects that
subjects will earn an average of $30 each
for their participation in the 90 minute
study, and that most subjects will earn
between $20 and $40.
David C. Shonka
Acting General Counsel
[FR Doc. 2010–13691 Filed 6–7–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750–01–S
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Office of the National Coordinator for
Health Information Technology; HIT
Standards Committee; Notice and
Publication of Committee
Recommendations to the National
Coordinator for Health Information
Technology
AGENCY: Office of the National
Coordinator for Health Information
Technology, HHS.
ACTION: Notice of committee
recommendations and invitation for
public input.
SUMMARY: This notice publishes
recommendations made by the HIT
Standards Committee (Committee) at its
public meeting on April 28, 2010, and
invites public input on the
recommendations at the Committee’s
next meeting on June 30, 2010. The
Committee is a federal advisory
committee to the Office of the National
Coordinator for Health Information
Technology (ONC).
Name of Committee: HIT Standards
Committee.
General Function of the Committee:
To provide recommendations to the
National Coordinator on standards,
implementation specifications, and
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Fmt 4703
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certification criteria for the electronic
exchange and use of health information
for purposes of adoption, consistent
with the implementation of the Federal
Health IT Strategic Plan, and in
accordance with policies developed by
the HIT Policy Committee. Sections
3003(b)(4) and (e) of the Health
Information Technology for Economic
and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act
requires ONC to publish the
Committee’s recommendations to the
National Coordinator in the Federal
Register and on ONC’s Web site.
Contact Person: Judith Sparrow,
Office of the National Coordinator, HHS,
330 C Street, SW., Washington, DC
20201, 202–205–4528, Fax: 202–690–
6079, e-mail: judy.sparrow@hhs.gov.
Recommendations: During the April
28, 2010 meeting, the Committee’s
recommendations focused on standards
for governance, funding and
infrastructure of controlled
vocabularies, value sets and vocabulary
subsets to be used primarily to further
interoperability between providers and
the systems they deploy as defined by
the various stages of Meaningful Use
Objectives. The recommendations may
be found at https://healthit.hhs.gov/
standardscommittee.
Procedure: Individuals wishing to
make comments on the Committee’s
April 28, 2010, recommendations may
present oral comments at the
Committee’s next meeting on June 30,
2010, from approximately 1 p.m. to 2
p.m., e.t., at the Marriott Hotel
Washington, 1221 22nd Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20037. Comments will
be limited to two (2) minutes per
person. A separate notice announcing
this meeting has been published in the
Federal Register and provides
additional information.
Authority: Sections 3003(b)(4) and (e) of
Health Information Technology for Economic
and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act, Title XIII
of Division A of the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA), Pub. L.
No. 111–5.
Dated: June 2, 2010.
Judith Sparrow,
Office of Programs and Coordination, Office
of the National Coordinator for Health
Information Technology.
[FR Doc. 2010–13683 Filed 6–7–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4150–45–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 109 (Tuesday, June 8, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 32470-32472]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-13691]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
Agency Information Collection Activities; Submission for OMB
Review; Comment Request
AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission (``FTC'' or ``Commission'').
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The FTC intends to conduct an exploratory study on consumer
susceptibility to fraudulent and deceptive marketing. This research
will be conducted to further the FTC's mission of protecting consumers
from unfair and deceptive marketing. Before gathering this information,
the FTC is seeking public comments on its proposed research. The
information collection requirements described below are being submitted
to the Office of Management and Budget (``OMB'') for review, as
required by the Paperwork Reduction Act (``PRA'').
DATES: Comments must be submitted on or before July 8, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties are invited to submit written comments
electronically or in paper form by following the instructions in the
Request for Comments part of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section
below. Comments in electronic form should be submitted by using the
following weblink: (https://public.commentworks.com/ftc/fraudexperiment2) and following the instructions on the web-based
form). Comments filed in paper form should refer to ``Fraud
Susceptibility Experiment, FTC File No. P095501,'' both in the text and
on the envelope, and should be mailed or delivered to the following
address: Federal Trade Commission, Office of the Secretary, Room H-135
(Annex J), 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC 20580, in the
manner detailed in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section below.
All comments should additionally be submitted to: Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget,
Attention: Desk Officer for the Federal Trade Commission. Comments
should be submitted via facsimile to (202) 395-5167 because U.S. postal
mail at the OMB is subject to delays due to heightened security
precautions.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Requests for additional information
should be addressed to Patrick McAlvanah, Economist, Bureau of
Economics, Federal Trade Commission, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Mail
Stop NJ-4136, Washington, DC 20580. Telephone: (202) 326-2974; e-mail:
(fraudexperiment@ftc.gov).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Request for Comments:
Interested parties are invited to submit written comments
electronically or in paper form. Comments should refer to ``Fraud
Susceptibility Experiment, FTC File No. P095501'' to facilitate the
organization of comments. Please note that your comment -- including
your name and your state -- will be placed on the public record of this
proceeding, including on the publicly accessible FTC Website, at
(https://www.ftc.gov/os/publiccomments.shtm).
Because comments will be made public, they should not include any
sensitive personal information, such as an individual's Social Security
Number; date of birth; driver's license number or other state
identification number, or foreign country equivalent; passport number;
financial account number; or credit or debit card number. Comments also
should not include any sensitive health information, such as medical
records or other individually identifiable health information. In
addition, comments should not include any ``[t]rade secret or any
commercial or financial information which is obtained from any person
and which is privileged or confidential'' as provided in Section 6(f)
of the Federal Trade Commission Act (``FTC Act''), 15 U.S.C. 46(f), and
FTC Rule 4.10(a)(2), 16 CFR 4.10(a)(2). Comments containing material
for which confidential treatment is requested must be filed in paper
form, must be clearly labeled ``Confidential,'' and must comply with
FTC Rule 4.9(c), 16 CFR 4.9(c).\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The comment must be accompanied by an explicit request for
confidential treatment, including the factual and legal basis for
the request, and must identify the specific portions of the comment
to be withheld from the public record. The request will be granted
or denied by the Commission's General Counsel, consistent with
applicable law and the public interest. See FTC Rule 4.9(c), 16 CFR
4.9(c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because paper mail addressed to the FTC is subject to delay due to
heightened security screening, please consider submitting your comments
in electronic form. Comments filed in electronic form should be
submitted by using the following weblink: (https://public.commentworks.com/ftc/fraudexperiment2) (and following the
instructions on the web-based form). To ensure that the Commission
considers an electronic comment, you must file it on the web-based form
at the weblink: (https://public.commentworks.com/ftc/fraudexperiment2).
If this Notice
[[Page 32471]]
appears at (https://www.regulations.gov/search/Regs/home.html#home), you
may also file an electronic comment through that website. The
Commission will consider all comments that regulations.gov forwards to
it.
A comment filed in paper form should include the ``Fraud
Susceptibility Experiment, FTC File No. P095501'' reference both in the
text and on the envelope, and should be mailed or delivered to the
following address: Federal Trade Commission, Office of the Secretary,
Room H-135 (Annex J), 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC
20580. The FTC is requesting that any comment filed in paper form be
sent by courier or overnight service, if possible, because U.S. postal
mail in the Washington area and at the Commission is subject to delay
due to heightened security precautions.
The FTC Act and other laws the Commission administers permit the
collection of public comments to consider and use in this proceeding as
appropriate. The Commission will consider all timely and responsive
public comments that it receives, whether filed in paper or electronic
form. Comments received will be available to the public on the FTC
Website, to the extent practicable, at (https://www.ftc.gov/os/publiccomments.shtm). As a matter of discretion, the Commission makes
every effort to remove home contact information for individuals from
the public comments it receives before placing those comments on the
FTC Website. More information, including routine uses permitted by the
Privacy Act, may be found in the FTC's privacy policy, at (https://www.ftc.gov/ftc/privacy.shtm).
On June 11, 2009, the FTC sought comment on the information
collection requirements associated with the proposed Fraud
Susceptibility Experiment study.\2\ No comments were received. Pursuant
to the OMB regulations, 5 CFR Part 1320, that implement the PRA, 44
U.S.C. 3501-3521, the Commission is providing this second opportunity
for public comment. All comments should be filed as prescribed in the
ADDRESSES section above, and must be received on or before July 8,
2010.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ 74 FR 27794.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Background Information:
As part of its consumer protection mission, the FTC has brought
hundreds of cases targeting fraud, and has committed significant
resources to educational initiatives designed to protect consumers. The
Commission hosted a Fraud Forum\3\ on February 25-26, 2009 to examine
fraud in the market place. The Commission has also conducted telephone
surveys in 2003 and 2005 designed to measure the proportion of the U.S.
adult population that has fallen victim to various consumer frauds.\4\
Despite this, surprisingly little is known about what determines
consumers' susceptibility to fraud. For example, the 2003 and 2005 FTC
consumer fraud surveys found that education was not a significant
predictor of fraud victimization. Understanding when and why people are
vulnerable to fraud would better inform the FTC's substantial, ongoing
efforts to fight fraud through law enforcement and consumer education.
Additional insights into how and why people fall victim to fraud could
also help improve any future fraud surveys the Commission may
undertake. The study announced in this notice is a preliminary and
exploratory step toward facilitating those efforts. The study is not
intended to lead to enforcement actions; rather, study results may aid
the FTC's efforts to better target its enforcement actions and consumer
education initiatives, and improve future fraud surveys.
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\3\ Information on the Fraud Forum is available at: (https://www.ftc.gov/bcp/workshops/fraudforum/index.shtm).
\4\ The Commission has published two staff reports describing
the results of these surveys - Consumer Fraud in the United States:
An FTC Survey (published August 2004 and available at (https://www.ftc.gov/reports/consumerfraud/040805confraudrpt.pdf) and
Consumer Fraud in the United States: The Second FTC Survey
(published in October 2007 and available at (https://www.ftc.gov/opa/2007/10/fraud.pdf).
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Economic and psychological experiments have identified several
decision-making biases, such as impulsivity, over-confidence, over-
optimism, and loss aversion, that can cause inaccurate assessments of
the risks, costs, and benefits of various choices. FTC staff proposes
to conduct an economic laboratory experiment to study whether these
types of decision biases are related to consumer susceptibility to
fraudulent or deceptive marketing claims. Staff intends to study
consumers' assessment of potentially deceptive advertisements, in
addition to their assessment of non-deceptive advertisements. Staff
seeks to understand which characteristics of individuals and
advertisements predict consumers' ability to differentiate between
apparently fraudulent materials and apparently legitimate materials.
Pursuant to the OMB regulations, 5 CFR Part 1320, that implement
the PRA, 44 U.S.C. 3501-21, the FTC is providing this opportunity for
public comment while requesting that OMB approve the study. Under the
PRA, federal agencies must obtain OMB approval for each collection of
information they conduct or sponsor. ``Collection of information''
means agency requests or requirements that members of the public submit
reports, keep records, or provide information to a third party. 44
U.S.C. 3502(3); 5 CFR 1320.3(c). All comments should be filed as
prescribed in the ADDRESSES section above, and must be received on or
before July 8, 2010.
A. Description of the collection of information and proposed use
The FTC proposes to conduct an experiment in a university's
economics laboratory with 250 subjects drawn from the campus
community.\5\ A sample of 250 persons enables random assignment of
subjects into different experimental conditions of sufficient size for
analytic power. The sample is not intended to be nationally
representative, but will still provide useful insights into consumer
susceptibility to fraud. In addition, five to ten of these subjects
will participate in a pretest. Pretest subjects will participate in an
in-person interview about the clarity and comprehensibility of the
instructions.
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\5\ Staff has contracted with a faculty member of George Mason
University who will recruit the study subjects and oversee and
administer the experiment.
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The study will gauge consumer attitudes towards legitimate and
potentially fraudulent or deceptive advertisements. Staff plans to ask
subjects to examine advertisements for fraudulent products and report
their opinion about the credibility of the advertisements. Staff also
plans to ask participants to rate the credibility of advertisements for
apparently legitimate products to gauge how participants distinguish
between apparently fraudulent product claims and legitimate product
claims. Staff plans to measure consumer knowledge, risk attitudes,
impatience, and skepticism using existing methods from economics and
psychology research. Staff intends to measure consumer knowledge using
consumer literacy, financial literacy, and numeracy questions\6\ in
order to test subjects' marketplace understanding and sophistication.
Staff seeks to determine if people with such knowledge deem fraudulent
advertisements to be less credible than legitimate advertisements.
Staff plans to measure subjects' risk attitudes through
[[Page 32472]]
a series of choices between smaller certain amounts of money or larger
risky amounts.\7\ Staff intends to describe the product to some
subjects as creating benefits, while presenting to other subjects
nearly identical information depicted as a reduction in harm. Staff
intends to then test whether risk-averse and loss-averse subjects are
particularly susceptible to fraudulent claims framed as opportunities
to escape losses.\8\ Staff plans to measure subjects' impatience
through a series of choices between smaller monetary amounts received
sooner or larger amounts but received later.\9\ Staff would then test
to see if impatient subjects are more susceptible to fraudulent claims.
Staff also plans to elicit measures of optimism \10\ and skepticism
\11\ to determine their roles in deeming advertisements, both of
fraudulent and legitimate products, as credible. In addition, staff
intends to collect demographic and background information from the
surveyed subjects. The FTC has contracted with the faculty of a
university-run experimental economics laboratory to locate and recruit
subjects and conduct the experiments.
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\6\ Staff plans to use financial literacy and numeracy measures
such as in James Banks and Zoe Oldfield, Understanding Pensions:
Cognitive Function, Numerical Ability and Retirement Saving, Fiscal
Studies, 2007, 28 (2).
\7\ Staff intends to use standard risk aversion measurement
methodologies akin to those in Charles Holt and Susan Laury, Risk
Aversion and Incentive Effects, American Economic Review, December
2002, 1644-1655.
\8\ Several academic articles report that people are more
willing to take identical risks over monetary gambles if the risk is
presented as an opportunity to escape losses rather than as a chance
to gain. Our ``framing'' methodologies emulate those in Amos Tversky
and Daniel Kahneman, The Framing of Decisions and the Psychology of
Choice, Science, Vol. 211, No. 4481 (Jan. 30, 1981), 453-458.
\9\ Staff intends to use methodology similar to that in Stephan
Meier and Charles Sprenger, Present-Biased Preferences and Credit
Card Borrowing, American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 2010,
2:1, 193-210.
\10\ Staff plans to use standard questions similar to those in
Manju Puri and David Robinson, Optimism and Economic Choice, Journal
of Financial Economics, 2007, Vol. 86, 71-99.
\11\ Staff plans to use the scale developed in Carl Obermiller
and Eric Spangenberg, Development of a Scale to Measure Consumer
Skepticism toward Advertising, Journal of Consumer Psychology, Vol.
7, No. 2, 1998, 159-186.
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Staff will pre-test the experimental procedures with up to ten
subjects to ensure that the instructions provided to participants are
clear and comprehensible, and that the experimental procedures are
workable. Pre-test subjects will be drawn from the same university
subject pool as the experiment's subjects.
B. Estimated Hours Burden
The FTC plans to seek information from up to 250 respondents for
approximately 90 minutes each. Allowing for pre-testing of the
instructions on as many as 10 respondents, at an additional 30 minutes
apiece, cumulative burden, inclusive of the pre-testing, will total
approximately 380 hours.
C. Estimated Costs Burden
The cost per respondent should be negligible. Participation will
not require start-up, capital, or labor expenditures by respondents.
The above-noted contractor will recruit the student and community
member subjects to participate in this study; subjects will be asked to
respond to an initial recruitment email to participate voluntarily.
Staff will compensate all subjects for their participation in the 90-
minute study. Subjects will receive approximately $8 as a show-up fee;
in addition, they will have the opportunity to earn more during the
course of the study based upon their responses to various questions.
Staff expects that subjects will earn an average of $30 each for their
participation in the 90 minute study, and that most subjects will earn
between $20 and $40.
David C. Shonka
Acting General Counsel
[FR Doc. 2010-13691 Filed 6-7-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750-01-S