Hypothetical bias is the common finding that hypothetical monetary values for “goods” are higher than real values. We extend this research to the domain of “bads” such as consumer and household choices made to avoid aversive outcomes (e.g., insurance). Previous evidence of hot-cold empathy gaps suggest food disgust is likely to be strongly underestimated in hypothetical (cold) choice. Depending on relative underestimation of food disgust and pain of spending, the hypothetical bias for aversive bad scan go in the typical direction for goods, disappear, or reverse in sign. We find that the bias is reversed in sign—subjects pay more to avoid bads when choice is real. fMRI shows that real choice more strongly activates striatum and medial prefr...
In economic and psychological theory there is evidence that the manner ("framing") in whic...
What role(s) do emotions have in choice preference? Individuals’ choices depend on their memories an...
SummaryThe subjective values of choice options can impact on behavior in two fundamentally different...
Hypothetical bias is the common finding that hypothetical monetary values for “goods” are higher tha...
Hypothetical bias is the common finding that hypothetical monetary values for goods are higher than ...
Hypothetical reports of intended behavior are commonly used to draw conclusions about real choices. ...
AbstractHumans show substantial deviation from rationality during economic decision making under unc...
Decision-making is often viewed as a two-stage process, where subjective values are first assigned t...
Decisions are prone to bias. This can be seen in daily choices. For instance, when the markets are p...
Neuroimaging studies of decision-making have generally related neural activity to objective measures...
Real behaviors are binding consequential commitments to a course of action, such as harming another ...
The pervasive tendency to discount the value of future rewards varies considerably across individual...
When people state their willingness to pay for something, the amount usually differs from the behavi...
Humans typically display inequality aversion in social situations, which manifests itself as a prefe...
SummaryAccording to economic theories, preference for one item over others reveals its rank value on...
In economic and psychological theory there is evidence that the manner ("framing") in whic...
What role(s) do emotions have in choice preference? Individuals’ choices depend on their memories an...
SummaryThe subjective values of choice options can impact on behavior in two fundamentally different...
Hypothetical bias is the common finding that hypothetical monetary values for “goods” are higher tha...
Hypothetical bias is the common finding that hypothetical monetary values for goods are higher than ...
Hypothetical reports of intended behavior are commonly used to draw conclusions about real choices. ...
AbstractHumans show substantial deviation from rationality during economic decision making under unc...
Decision-making is often viewed as a two-stage process, where subjective values are first assigned t...
Decisions are prone to bias. This can be seen in daily choices. For instance, when the markets are p...
Neuroimaging studies of decision-making have generally related neural activity to objective measures...
Real behaviors are binding consequential commitments to a course of action, such as harming another ...
The pervasive tendency to discount the value of future rewards varies considerably across individual...
When people state their willingness to pay for something, the amount usually differs from the behavi...
Humans typically display inequality aversion in social situations, which manifests itself as a prefe...
SummaryAccording to economic theories, preference for one item over others reveals its rank value on...
In economic and psychological theory there is evidence that the manner ("framing") in whic...
What role(s) do emotions have in choice preference? Individuals’ choices depend on their memories an...
SummaryThe subjective values of choice options can impact on behavior in two fundamentally different...