The attraction effect in multi-alternative decision making reflects the context-dependent violation of axioms that are considered fundamental to rational choice. This effect is believed to depend on relatively effortless and intuitive processing (System 1) rather than on effortful and elaborative processing (System 2). To investigate the relationship between cognitive resources and the attraction effect in detail, we used a task-irrelevant probe technique, wherein task-irrelevant auditory probes were presented while participants viewed each alternative in a decision-making task, and measured the electroencephalographic responses to the probes. Thirty participants solved 48 hypothetical purchase problems with three alternatives that differed...
Individuals make decisions under risk throughout daily life. Standard models of economic decision ma...
In multi-alternative choice, the attraction, compromise, and similarity effects demonstrate that the...
Previous experiments have found that subjecting participants to cognitive load leads to poorer decis...
The attraction effect in multi-alternative decision making reflects the context-dependent violation ...
The attraction effect in multi-alternative decision making reflects the context-dependent violation ...
The attraction effect in multi-alternative decision making reflects the context-dependent violation ...
Classical economic theory contends that the utility of a choice option should be independent of othe...
People rely on the choice context to guide their decisions, violating fundamental principles of rati...
The current study examines attraction effects, in which the addition of an asymmetrically dominated ...
The attraction effect emerges when adding a seemingly irrelevant option(decoy) to a binary choice sh...
Humans and other animals often violate economic principles when choosing between multiple alternativ...
In this paper we provide choice-process experimental evidence that the attraction effect is a short-...
Individuals make decisions under risk throughout daily life. Standard models of economic decision ma...
Humans and other animals often violate economic principles when choosing between multiple alternativ...
We provide novel support for Query Theory, a reason-based decision framework, extending it to multia...
Individuals make decisions under risk throughout daily life. Standard models of economic decision ma...
In multi-alternative choice, the attraction, compromise, and similarity effects demonstrate that the...
Previous experiments have found that subjecting participants to cognitive load leads to poorer decis...
The attraction effect in multi-alternative decision making reflects the context-dependent violation ...
The attraction effect in multi-alternative decision making reflects the context-dependent violation ...
The attraction effect in multi-alternative decision making reflects the context-dependent violation ...
Classical economic theory contends that the utility of a choice option should be independent of othe...
People rely on the choice context to guide their decisions, violating fundamental principles of rati...
The current study examines attraction effects, in which the addition of an asymmetrically dominated ...
The attraction effect emerges when adding a seemingly irrelevant option(decoy) to a binary choice sh...
Humans and other animals often violate economic principles when choosing between multiple alternativ...
In this paper we provide choice-process experimental evidence that the attraction effect is a short-...
Individuals make decisions under risk throughout daily life. Standard models of economic decision ma...
Humans and other animals often violate economic principles when choosing between multiple alternativ...
We provide novel support for Query Theory, a reason-based decision framework, extending it to multia...
Individuals make decisions under risk throughout daily life. Standard models of economic decision ma...
In multi-alternative choice, the attraction, compromise, and similarity effects demonstrate that the...
Previous experiments have found that subjecting participants to cognitive load leads to poorer decis...