When people learn to make decisions from experience, a reasonable intuition is that additional relevant information should improve their performance. In contrast, we find that additional information about foregone rewards (i.e., what could have gained at each point by making a different choice) severely hinders participants' ability to repeatedly make choices that maximize long-term gains. We conclude that foregone reward information accentuates the local superiority of short-term options (e.g., consumption) and consequently biases choice away from productive long-term options (e.g., exercise). These conclusions are consistent with a standard reinforcement-learning mechanism that processes information about experienced and forgone rewards. ...
Human decisions are strongly influenced by past experience or by the subjective values attributed to...
People tend to discount rewards or losses that occur in the future. Such delay discounting has been ...
International audienceThe valence of new information influences learning rates in humans: good news ...
When people learn to make decisions from experience, a reasonable intuition is that additional relev...
“Making an informed decision ” implies that more information leads to better decisions, yet it may b...
When people anticipate uncertain future outcomes, they often prefer to know their fate in advance. I...
A central question in intertemporal decision making is why people reverse their own past choices. So...
People tend to discount rewards or losses that occur in the future. Such delay discounting has been ...
In everyday life, many action outcomes and the information associated with them (e.g., the receiving...
In everyday life, many action outcomes and the information associated with them (e.g., the receiving...
When people anticipate uncertain future outcomes, they often prefer to know their fate in advance. I...
It is largely expected that people can learn from past experiences and use this knowledge to make be...
It is largely expected that people can learn from past experiences and use this knowledge to make be...
It is largely expected that people can learn from past experiences and use this knowledge to make be...
People tend to discount rewards or losses that occur in the future. Such delay discounting has been ...
Human decisions are strongly influenced by past experience or by the subjective values attributed to...
People tend to discount rewards or losses that occur in the future. Such delay discounting has been ...
International audienceThe valence of new information influences learning rates in humans: good news ...
When people learn to make decisions from experience, a reasonable intuition is that additional relev...
“Making an informed decision ” implies that more information leads to better decisions, yet it may b...
When people anticipate uncertain future outcomes, they often prefer to know their fate in advance. I...
A central question in intertemporal decision making is why people reverse their own past choices. So...
People tend to discount rewards or losses that occur in the future. Such delay discounting has been ...
In everyday life, many action outcomes and the information associated with them (e.g., the receiving...
In everyday life, many action outcomes and the information associated with them (e.g., the receiving...
When people anticipate uncertain future outcomes, they often prefer to know their fate in advance. I...
It is largely expected that people can learn from past experiences and use this knowledge to make be...
It is largely expected that people can learn from past experiences and use this knowledge to make be...
It is largely expected that people can learn from past experiences and use this knowledge to make be...
People tend to discount rewards or losses that occur in the future. Such delay discounting has been ...
Human decisions are strongly influenced by past experience or by the subjective values attributed to...
People tend to discount rewards or losses that occur in the future. Such delay discounting has been ...
International audienceThe valence of new information influences learning rates in humans: good news ...