Peoples' subjective attitude towards costs such as, e.g., risk, delay or effort are key determinants of inter-individual differences in goal-directed behaviour. Thus, the ability to learn about others' prudent, impatient or lazy attitudes is likely to be critical for social interactions. Conversely, how adaptive such attitudes are in a given environment is highly uncertain. Thus, the brain may be tuned to garner information about how such costs ought to be arbitrated. In particular, observing others' attitude may change one's uncertain belief about how to best behave in related difficult decision contexts. In turn, learning from others' attitudes is determined by one's ability to learn about others' attitudes. We first derive, from basic op...
The understanding of the factors and conditions under which humans and other animals fail to adjust ...
Is collaboration the fast choice for humans? Past studies proposed that cooperation is a behavioural...
Dual-process models imply that automatic attitudes should be less flexible than their self-reported ...
Peoples' subjective attitude towards costs such as, e.g., risk, delay or effort are key determinants...
markdownabstractThis thesis presents evidence suggesting that the same types of biases in individual...
Inferring on others' (potentially time-varying) intentions is a fundamental problem during many soci...
Inferring on others' (potentially time-varying) intentions is a fundamental problem during many soci...
Inferring on others' (potentially time-varying) intentions is a fundamental problem during many soci...
We propose a computational model of social preference judgments that accounts for the degree of an a...
This dissertation is composed of three papers on distinct topics, each studying a different aspect o...
Organisms in a social species constantly need to make trade-offs between their own welfare and that ...
Reward properties of stimuli can undergo sudden changes, and the detection of these 'reversals' is o...
Learning social behaviour of others strongly influences one’s own social attitudes. We com-pare seve...
The formation of attitudes toward novel objects was examined as a function of exploratory behavior. ...
Do agents believe to be agreeing more with others in the long-run? This paper designs an experiment ...
The understanding of the factors and conditions under which humans and other animals fail to adjust ...
Is collaboration the fast choice for humans? Past studies proposed that cooperation is a behavioural...
Dual-process models imply that automatic attitudes should be less flexible than their self-reported ...
Peoples' subjective attitude towards costs such as, e.g., risk, delay or effort are key determinants...
markdownabstractThis thesis presents evidence suggesting that the same types of biases in individual...
Inferring on others' (potentially time-varying) intentions is a fundamental problem during many soci...
Inferring on others' (potentially time-varying) intentions is a fundamental problem during many soci...
Inferring on others' (potentially time-varying) intentions is a fundamental problem during many soci...
We propose a computational model of social preference judgments that accounts for the degree of an a...
This dissertation is composed of three papers on distinct topics, each studying a different aspect o...
Organisms in a social species constantly need to make trade-offs between their own welfare and that ...
Reward properties of stimuli can undergo sudden changes, and the detection of these 'reversals' is o...
Learning social behaviour of others strongly influences one’s own social attitudes. We com-pare seve...
The formation of attitudes toward novel objects was examined as a function of exploratory behavior. ...
Do agents believe to be agreeing more with others in the long-run? This paper designs an experiment ...
The understanding of the factors and conditions under which humans and other animals fail to adjust ...
Is collaboration the fast choice for humans? Past studies proposed that cooperation is a behavioural...
Dual-process models imply that automatic attitudes should be less flexible than their self-reported ...