How do we make decisions when confronted with several alternatives (e.g., on a supermarket shelf)? Previous work has shown that accumulator models, such as the drift-diffusion model, can provide accurate descriptions of the psychometric data for binary value-based choices, and that the choice process is guided by visual attention. However, the computational processes used to make choices in more complicated situations involving three or more options are unknown. We propose a model of trinary value-based choice that generalizes what is known about binary choice, and test it using an eye-tracking experiment. We find that the model provides a quantitatively accurate description of the relationship between choice, reaction time, and visual fi...
In risky and other multiattribute choices, the process of choosing is well described by random walk ...
In this paper, we study the Attentional Drift-Diffusion Model in two quaternary cases, both from the...
Preferential choices are often products of stochastic accumulation of noisy preferences in favor of ...
How do we make decisions when confronted with several alternatives (e.g., on a supermarket shelf)? P...
How do we make simple purchasing decisions (e.g., whether or not to buy a product at a given price)?...
Most organisms facing a choice between multiple stimuli will look repeatedly at them, presumably imp...
Perceptual decisions requiring the comparison of spatially distributed stimuli that are fixated sequ...
Humans and other animals often violate economic principles when choosing between multiple alternativ...
We use computational modelling to examine the ability of evidence accumulation models to produce the...
Several decision-making models predict that it should be possible to affect real binary choices by m...
In principle, formal dynamical models of decision making hold the potential to represent fundamental...
Many decisions we make require visually identifying and evaluating numerous alternatives quickly. Th...
Choice experiments (CE), involving multi-attribute choices, are increasingly used in economics to va...
Preferential choices are often products of stochastic accumulation of noisy preferences in favor of ...
In risky and other multiattribute choices, the process of choosing is well described by random walk ...
In risky and other multiattribute choices, the process of choosing is well described by random walk ...
In this paper, we study the Attentional Drift-Diffusion Model in two quaternary cases, both from the...
Preferential choices are often products of stochastic accumulation of noisy preferences in favor of ...
How do we make decisions when confronted with several alternatives (e.g., on a supermarket shelf)? P...
How do we make simple purchasing decisions (e.g., whether or not to buy a product at a given price)?...
Most organisms facing a choice between multiple stimuli will look repeatedly at them, presumably imp...
Perceptual decisions requiring the comparison of spatially distributed stimuli that are fixated sequ...
Humans and other animals often violate economic principles when choosing between multiple alternativ...
We use computational modelling to examine the ability of evidence accumulation models to produce the...
Several decision-making models predict that it should be possible to affect real binary choices by m...
In principle, formal dynamical models of decision making hold the potential to represent fundamental...
Many decisions we make require visually identifying and evaluating numerous alternatives quickly. Th...
Choice experiments (CE), involving multi-attribute choices, are increasingly used in economics to va...
Preferential choices are often products of stochastic accumulation of noisy preferences in favor of ...
In risky and other multiattribute choices, the process of choosing is well described by random walk ...
In risky and other multiattribute choices, the process of choosing is well described by random walk ...
In this paper, we study the Attentional Drift-Diffusion Model in two quaternary cases, both from the...
Preferential choices are often products of stochastic accumulation of noisy preferences in favor of ...