Little research has examined how gain- and loss-framed options influence participants’ affective states. In the current paper, we present two studies that measure affective responses to framed options to identify a potential mediator of the relation between frame and choice. We found that participants reported more positive responses after reading gain-framed options that presented a certain outcome compared to loss-framed options that presented a certain outcome, consistent with the choice patterns of the framing effect. We also found that framing effects were mediated by affective evaluation of the options. We suggest future researchers continue to assess the influence of affective response on evaluating options and making decisions
Theory and research implicate both emotional and cognitive processes in risky choice framing effects...
Under what conditions, why, and for whom are framing effects most likely? In this paper, we build on...
Everyday decisions are never made in a void -- a busy environment surrounds a decision maker as he o...
International audienceOver the past 30 years, researchers have shown that human choices are highly s...
The framing effect research of Tversky and Kahneman (1981) has shown that people prefer certain opti...
Risky decision making can be biased by several types of contextual factors-in particular, framing of...
Accentuate the positive or accentuate the negative? The literature has been mixed as to how the alte...
International audienceDual-process theories have suggested that emotion plays a key role in the fram...
This poster explores the differential predictions tested pertaining decision-making and the framing ...
Three studies investigate the impact of the amount of elaboration on framing effects. In all three s...
The framing effect is a cognitive bias in which the way a choice is presented influences decision-ma...
The present research explored the role of affect in the framing effect. In Study 1, participants pro...
One of the key issues faced by researchers employing non-market valuation techniques is framing. Thi...
Risky decision making, and how it changes over the lifespan, is important for theory and public poli...
Research on individual differences and the framing effect has focused primarily on how variability i...
Theory and research implicate both emotional and cognitive processes in risky choice framing effects...
Under what conditions, why, and for whom are framing effects most likely? In this paper, we build on...
Everyday decisions are never made in a void -- a busy environment surrounds a decision maker as he o...
International audienceOver the past 30 years, researchers have shown that human choices are highly s...
The framing effect research of Tversky and Kahneman (1981) has shown that people prefer certain opti...
Risky decision making can be biased by several types of contextual factors-in particular, framing of...
Accentuate the positive or accentuate the negative? The literature has been mixed as to how the alte...
International audienceDual-process theories have suggested that emotion plays a key role in the fram...
This poster explores the differential predictions tested pertaining decision-making and the framing ...
Three studies investigate the impact of the amount of elaboration on framing effects. In all three s...
The framing effect is a cognitive bias in which the way a choice is presented influences decision-ma...
The present research explored the role of affect in the framing effect. In Study 1, participants pro...
One of the key issues faced by researchers employing non-market valuation techniques is framing. Thi...
Risky decision making, and how it changes over the lifespan, is important for theory and public poli...
Research on individual differences and the framing effect has focused primarily on how variability i...
Theory and research implicate both emotional and cognitive processes in risky choice framing effects...
Under what conditions, why, and for whom are framing effects most likely? In this paper, we build on...
Everyday decisions are never made in a void -- a busy environment surrounds a decision maker as he o...