An important category of seemingly maladaptive decisions involves failure to postpone gratification. A person pursuing a desirable long-run outcome may abandon it in favor of a short-run alternative that has been available all along. Here we present a theoretical framework in which this seemingly irrational behavior emerges from stable preferences and veridical judgments. Our account recognizes that decision makers generally face uncertainty regarding the time at which future outcomes will materialize. When timing is uncertain, the value of persistence depends crucially on the nature of a decision maker\u27s prior temporal beliefs. Certain forms of temporal beliefs imply that a delay\u27s predicted remaining length increases as a function o...
Decision makers face a nontrivial problem when evaluating how much time to invest in an uncertain fu...
A decision maker with time consistent preferences may exhibit diminishing impatience, when uncertain...
Current theories of procrastination argue that people put things off into the future with the expect...
A person pursuing a desirable long-run outcome may abandon it in favor of a short-run alternative th...
An important category of seemingly maladaptive decisions involves failure to postpone gratification....
A central question in intertemporal decision making is why people reverse their own past choices. So...
Imagine that a few seconds ago you called a restaurant to book a reservation and were placed on hold...
Extant theories of intertemporal choice entangle two aspects of time preference: impatience and time...
Decision makers tend to exhibit a higher degree of impatience when considering a delay to an immedia...
Decision makers tend to exhibit a higher degree of impatience when considering a delay to an immedia...
The time available to inform decisions is often limited, for example because of a response deadline....
We study time preferences in a real-effort experiment with a one-month horizon. We report that two t...
People waiting to receive information about a personally relevant future event often become increasi...
We study intertemporal choices through an experiment that elicits a subject's plan and then tracks i...
People make many decisions with consequences that are delayed, rather than immediate. Of particular ...
Decision makers face a nontrivial problem when evaluating how much time to invest in an uncertain fu...
A decision maker with time consistent preferences may exhibit diminishing impatience, when uncertain...
Current theories of procrastination argue that people put things off into the future with the expect...
A person pursuing a desirable long-run outcome may abandon it in favor of a short-run alternative th...
An important category of seemingly maladaptive decisions involves failure to postpone gratification....
A central question in intertemporal decision making is why people reverse their own past choices. So...
Imagine that a few seconds ago you called a restaurant to book a reservation and were placed on hold...
Extant theories of intertemporal choice entangle two aspects of time preference: impatience and time...
Decision makers tend to exhibit a higher degree of impatience when considering a delay to an immedia...
Decision makers tend to exhibit a higher degree of impatience when considering a delay to an immedia...
The time available to inform decisions is often limited, for example because of a response deadline....
We study time preferences in a real-effort experiment with a one-month horizon. We report that two t...
People waiting to receive information about a personally relevant future event often become increasi...
We study intertemporal choices through an experiment that elicits a subject's plan and then tracks i...
People make many decisions with consequences that are delayed, rather than immediate. Of particular ...
Decision makers face a nontrivial problem when evaluating how much time to invest in an uncertain fu...
A decision maker with time consistent preferences may exhibit diminishing impatience, when uncertain...
Current theories of procrastination argue that people put things off into the future with the expect...