Given a repeated choice between two or more options with independent and identically distributed reward probabilities, overall pay-offs can be maximized by the exclusive selection of the option with the greatest likelihood of reward. The tendency to match response proportions to reward contingencies is suboptimal. nevertheless, this behaviour is well documented. A number of explanatory accounts have been proposed for probability matching. These include failed pattern matching, driven by apophenia, and a heuristic-driven response that can be overruled with sufficient deliberation. We report two experiments that were designed to test the relative effects on choice behaviour of both an intuitive versus strategic approach to the task and belief...
Probability matching 2 Probability matching is a suboptimal behavior that often plagues human decisi...
Research on preference reversals has demonstrated a disproportionate influence of outcome probabilit...
Why can initial biases persist in repeated choice tasks? Previous research has shown that frequent r...
Given a repeated choice between two or more options with independent and identically distributed rew...
Over a series of decisions between two or more probabilistically rewarded options, humans have a ten...
Over a series of decisions between two or more probabilistically rewarded options, humans have a ten...
Given a repeated choice between two or more options with fixed, independent and identically distribu...
Research has not yet reached a consensus on why humans match probabilities instead of maximise in a ...
In life, people commonly face repeated decisions under risk or uncertainty. While normative economic...
Findings from two experiments indicate that probability matching in sequential choice arises from an...
Gaissmaier and Schooler (2008) [Gaissmaier, W., & Schooler, L. J. (2008). The smart potential behind...
Probability matching in sequential decision making is a striking violation of rational choice that h...
Probability matching in sequential decision making is a striking violation of rational choice that h...
There has been a long-running debate over whether humans match or maximize when faced with different...
Any individual's response intended to be random should be as probable as any other. However, 3 exper...
Probability matching 2 Probability matching is a suboptimal behavior that often plagues human decisi...
Research on preference reversals has demonstrated a disproportionate influence of outcome probabilit...
Why can initial biases persist in repeated choice tasks? Previous research has shown that frequent r...
Given a repeated choice between two or more options with independent and identically distributed rew...
Over a series of decisions between two or more probabilistically rewarded options, humans have a ten...
Over a series of decisions between two or more probabilistically rewarded options, humans have a ten...
Given a repeated choice between two or more options with fixed, independent and identically distribu...
Research has not yet reached a consensus on why humans match probabilities instead of maximise in a ...
In life, people commonly face repeated decisions under risk or uncertainty. While normative economic...
Findings from two experiments indicate that probability matching in sequential choice arises from an...
Gaissmaier and Schooler (2008) [Gaissmaier, W., & Schooler, L. J. (2008). The smart potential behind...
Probability matching in sequential decision making is a striking violation of rational choice that h...
Probability matching in sequential decision making is a striking violation of rational choice that h...
There has been a long-running debate over whether humans match or maximize when faced with different...
Any individual's response intended to be random should be as probable as any other. However, 3 exper...
Probability matching 2 Probability matching is a suboptimal behavior that often plagues human decisi...
Research on preference reversals has demonstrated a disproportionate influence of outcome probabilit...
Why can initial biases persist in repeated choice tasks? Previous research has shown that frequent r...