It has been argued that behavior differs between transparent and nontransparent representations of a decision. However, the notion of a ‘transparent representation’ has not been precisely defined. We address this gap by providing formal definitions of ‘transparent frames’ for risk and time, establishing their uniqueness, presenting an approach to construct such frames, and comparing these framesto the ‘standard’ presentation format. Our typology of frames provides a logic for predicting systematic shifts in risk and time preferences as well as changes in the violation rates of rational choice theory. We conduct an experiment for choice under risk to investigate the framing effect between transparent and ‘standard’ frames and find such frami...
International audienceWe present a new experimental evidence of how framing affects decisions in the...
The leading normative (von Neumann & Morgenstern, 1947) and alternative psychological theories (e.g....
Decision-makers are sometimes influenced by the way in which choice situations are presented to them...
It has been argued that behavior differs between transparent and nontransparent representations of a...
We propose a comparative model of decision making under risk, uncertainty, and time, in which large ...
Chapter 2, titled “First-order stochastic dominance, framing effects & risk preferences”, experiment...
Framing effects play an important role in individual decision-making under risk. This investigation ...
Abstract Experimental work on decision-making shows that, when people evaluate risk, they often enga...
Rewording of decision problems involving risk in terms of loss or gains, without changing actual val...
We develop a nonparametric method called Generalized Restriction of Infinite Domains (GRID), for tes...
Experiments on decision-making show that, when people evaluate risk, they often engage in "narr...
International audienceDecision-makers present a systematic tendency to avoid ambiguous options for w...
We explore the effect of different presentation formats on elicitation of risk preferences using a p...
<p>Research of the framing effect of risky choice mostly applies to the tasks where the effect of on...
Research of the framing effect of risky choice mostly applies to the tasks where the effect of only ...
International audienceWe present a new experimental evidence of how framing affects decisions in the...
The leading normative (von Neumann & Morgenstern, 1947) and alternative psychological theories (e.g....
Decision-makers are sometimes influenced by the way in which choice situations are presented to them...
It has been argued that behavior differs between transparent and nontransparent representations of a...
We propose a comparative model of decision making under risk, uncertainty, and time, in which large ...
Chapter 2, titled “First-order stochastic dominance, framing effects & risk preferences”, experiment...
Framing effects play an important role in individual decision-making under risk. This investigation ...
Abstract Experimental work on decision-making shows that, when people evaluate risk, they often enga...
Rewording of decision problems involving risk in terms of loss or gains, without changing actual val...
We develop a nonparametric method called Generalized Restriction of Infinite Domains (GRID), for tes...
Experiments on decision-making show that, when people evaluate risk, they often engage in "narr...
International audienceDecision-makers present a systematic tendency to avoid ambiguous options for w...
We explore the effect of different presentation formats on elicitation of risk preferences using a p...
<p>Research of the framing effect of risky choice mostly applies to the tasks where the effect of on...
Research of the framing effect of risky choice mostly applies to the tasks where the effect of only ...
International audienceWe present a new experimental evidence of how framing affects decisions in the...
The leading normative (von Neumann & Morgenstern, 1947) and alternative psychological theories (e.g....
Decision-makers are sometimes influenced by the way in which choice situations are presented to them...