Human choice behavior exhibits many paradoxical and challenging patterns. Traditional explanations focus on how values are represented, but little is known about how values are integrated. Here we outline a psychophysical task for value integration that can be used as a window on high-level, multiattribute decisions. Participants choose between alternative rapidly presented streams of numerical values. By controlling the temporal distribution of the values, we demonstrate that this process underlies many puzzling choice paradoxes, such as temporal, risk, and framing biases, as well as preference reversals. These phenomena can be explained by a simple mechanism based on the integration of values, weighted by their salience. The salience of a...
Humans adjust their behavioral strategies to maximize rewards. However, in the laboratory, human dec...
This paper sheds new light on the preference reversal phenomenon by analyzing decision times in the ...
For more than 60 years, it has been known that people report higher (lower) subjective values for it...
Human choice behavior exhibits many paradoxical and challenging patterns. Traditional explanations f...
When making decisions humans often violate the principles of rational choice theory. Recent experime...
It is a widely held belief that people's choices are less sensitive to changes in value as value inc...
We propose a comparative model of decision making under risk, uncertainty, and time, in which large ...
The “preference reversal phenomenon,” a systematic disparity between people’s valuations and choices...
Researchers have benefited from characterizing evidence-based decision making as a process involving...
<div><p>Decisions involve two fundamental problems, selecting goals and generating actions to pursue...
It has long been assumed in economic theory that multi-attribute decisions involving several attribu...
Recent work has shown that visual fixations reflect and influence trial-to-trial variability in peop...
Standard neuroeconomic decision theory assumes that choice is based on a value comparison process, i...
Behavioural studies over half a century indicate that making categorical choices alters beliefs abou...
According to normative theories, reward-maximizing agents should have consistent preferences. Thus, ...
Humans adjust their behavioral strategies to maximize rewards. However, in the laboratory, human dec...
This paper sheds new light on the preference reversal phenomenon by analyzing decision times in the ...
For more than 60 years, it has been known that people report higher (lower) subjective values for it...
Human choice behavior exhibits many paradoxical and challenging patterns. Traditional explanations f...
When making decisions humans often violate the principles of rational choice theory. Recent experime...
It is a widely held belief that people's choices are less sensitive to changes in value as value inc...
We propose a comparative model of decision making under risk, uncertainty, and time, in which large ...
The “preference reversal phenomenon,” a systematic disparity between people’s valuations and choices...
Researchers have benefited from characterizing evidence-based decision making as a process involving...
<div><p>Decisions involve two fundamental problems, selecting goals and generating actions to pursue...
It has long been assumed in economic theory that multi-attribute decisions involving several attribu...
Recent work has shown that visual fixations reflect and influence trial-to-trial variability in peop...
Standard neuroeconomic decision theory assumes that choice is based on a value comparison process, i...
Behavioural studies over half a century indicate that making categorical choices alters beliefs abou...
According to normative theories, reward-maximizing agents should have consistent preferences. Thus, ...
Humans adjust their behavioral strategies to maximize rewards. However, in the laboratory, human dec...
This paper sheds new light on the preference reversal phenomenon by analyzing decision times in the ...
For more than 60 years, it has been known that people report higher (lower) subjective values for it...