In this paper, we study how increasing the cognitive demands of multitasking affects time preferences. The novelty of this paper is that it studied how time perception mediates the effect of multitasking on time preferences. Results from experimental psychology have demonstrated that people tend to experience the passage of time as quicker when they are busy with cognitively-demanding tasks. If time is experienced as passing faster, the future should be experienced as being closer, and patience should increase. However, a standard prediction from behavioral economics is that being cognitively loaded leads to less patient decisions. Our hypothesis is that increases in patience, driven by the speeding up of time, and decreases in patience, dr...
We examined how people respond to time pressure factors in a complex, multistimulus environment. In ...
Two studies examine the effect of the complexity of the choice environment on the perceived duration...
Previous research (Potts et al., 2018; Rosenbaum & Bui, 2019) suggests that participants\u27 time es...
Delay-discounting studies in neuroscience, psychology, and economics have been mostly focused on con...
This thesis consists of three papers that study individual preferences. The focus of the first two p...
Neuroscientific studies of intertemporal choice (IC) have focused mainly on the neural representatio...
Three experiments assessed whether maximizing and satisficing decision-making types were associated ...
International audienceThe aim of this study was to examine the factors that explain variations in th...
People often feel that a period of time becomes longer when it is described in more detail or cut in...
Extant theories of intertemporal choice entangle two aspects of time preference: impatience and time...
Two studies examine the effect of the complexity of the choice environment on the perceived duration...
<p>Decisions on <i>when to act</i> are critical in many health care, safety and security situations,...
Objective: The objective was to establish the nature of choice in cognitive multitasking.Background:...
Every day we complete a number of tasks which require us to accurately time events, from estimating ...
This paper examines whether individual's intertemporal choice is affected under time pressure. We re...
We examined how people respond to time pressure factors in a complex, multistimulus environment. In ...
Two studies examine the effect of the complexity of the choice environment on the perceived duration...
Previous research (Potts et al., 2018; Rosenbaum & Bui, 2019) suggests that participants\u27 time es...
Delay-discounting studies in neuroscience, psychology, and economics have been mostly focused on con...
This thesis consists of three papers that study individual preferences. The focus of the first two p...
Neuroscientific studies of intertemporal choice (IC) have focused mainly on the neural representatio...
Three experiments assessed whether maximizing and satisficing decision-making types were associated ...
International audienceThe aim of this study was to examine the factors that explain variations in th...
People often feel that a period of time becomes longer when it is described in more detail or cut in...
Extant theories of intertemporal choice entangle two aspects of time preference: impatience and time...
Two studies examine the effect of the complexity of the choice environment on the perceived duration...
<p>Decisions on <i>when to act</i> are critical in many health care, safety and security situations,...
Objective: The objective was to establish the nature of choice in cognitive multitasking.Background:...
Every day we complete a number of tasks which require us to accurately time events, from estimating ...
This paper examines whether individual's intertemporal choice is affected under time pressure. We re...
We examined how people respond to time pressure factors in a complex, multistimulus environment. In ...
Two studies examine the effect of the complexity of the choice environment on the perceived duration...
Previous research (Potts et al., 2018; Rosenbaum & Bui, 2019) suggests that participants\u27 time es...