The common heuristic association between scarcity and value implies that more valuable things appear scarcer (King, Hicks, & Abdelkhalik, 2009), an effect we show applies to time as well. In a series of studies, we found that both income and wealth, which affect the economic value of time, influence perceived time pressure. Study 1 found that changes in income were associated with changes in perceived time pressure. Studies 2–4 showed that experimentally manipulating time’s perceived economic value caused greater feelings of time pressure and less patient behavior. Finally, Study 5 demonstrated that the relationship between income and time pressure was strengthened when participants were randomly assigned to think about the precise eco...
Over the last two decades, global wealth has risen. Yet material affluence has not translated into t...
Many professional and educational settings require individuals to be willing and able to perform und...
People feel increasingly time pressured, particularly in two-earner households. But much of the time...
Four experiments demonstrate that loss aversion attenuates under time pressure. We posit a value fun...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2018Consumers often experience feelings of scarcity. There...
Carstensen’s Socioemotional Selectivity Theory proposes that a person’s ‘time perspective’ influence...
Economists have generally ignored the notion that perceived time may di¤er from clock time. Borrowin...
The results of five field and laboratory experiments reveal a ―time vs. money effect‖ whereby activa...
This dissertation examines how time pressure influences the perceptions of quality, sacrifice and va...
This thesis consists of three papers that study individual preferences. The focus of the first two p...
People's welfare is a function of both time and money. People can - and, it is said, increasingly do...
Free time has the potential to reduce time pressures, yet previous studies paradoxically report incr...
Around the world, increases in wealth have produced an unintended consequence: a rising sense of tim...
Over the last two decades, global wealth has risen. Yet material affluence has not translated into t...
Many professional and educational settings require individuals to be willing and able to perform und...
People feel increasingly time pressured, particularly in two-earner households. But much of the time...
Four experiments demonstrate that loss aversion attenuates under time pressure. We posit a value fun...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2018Consumers often experience feelings of scarcity. There...
Carstensen’s Socioemotional Selectivity Theory proposes that a person’s ‘time perspective’ influence...
Economists have generally ignored the notion that perceived time may di¤er from clock time. Borrowin...
The results of five field and laboratory experiments reveal a ―time vs. money effect‖ whereby activa...
This dissertation examines how time pressure influences the perceptions of quality, sacrifice and va...
This thesis consists of three papers that study individual preferences. The focus of the first two p...
People's welfare is a function of both time and money. People can - and, it is said, increasingly do...
Free time has the potential to reduce time pressures, yet previous studies paradoxically report incr...
Around the world, increases in wealth have produced an unintended consequence: a rising sense of tim...
Over the last two decades, global wealth has risen. Yet material affluence has not translated into t...
Many professional and educational settings require individuals to be willing and able to perform und...
People feel increasingly time pressured, particularly in two-earner households. But much of the time...