This study contributes to the understanding of how individuals make choices for themselves and on behalf of others in a risky environment. In a laboratory eye-tracking experiment, we investigate whether risk preferences, decision error, and information processing differ between decisions made for oneself and on behalf of others. While we find no differences in risk preferences when deciding for oneself or for someone else, individuals have a greater decision error when deciding for others. Process data partly explains these differences. Individuals spend less time, have less fixations, and inspect less information when deciding for others. We detect similar processing patterns when comparing intuitive and deliberative decision making. We ar...
This thesis examined decision making in the context of forced-choice situations, as characterised by...
Decision making is defined as the mental process of choosing among a set of alternatives. Although s...
People make hundreds of decisions every day, and very little is known about how they do this. A big ...
This study contributes to the understanding of how individuals make choices for themselves and on be...
In recent years, numerous studies comparing intuition and deliberation have been published. However,...
In recent years, numerous studies comparing intuition and deliberation have been published. However,...
Individual differences in cognitive abilities and skills can predict normatively superior and logica...
We asked participants to make simple risky choices while we recorded their eye movements. We built a...
Ideally, people seek and select information about unfamiliar risks with which they are confronted, b...
It has long been assumed in economic theory that multi-attribute decisions involving several attribu...
Human interactions often involve a choice between acting selfishly (in ones' own interest) and actin...
Computational models of decision making typically assume as people deliberate between options they m...
The construct of intuition has gained recent attention in the literature on decision-making and emot...
The debate about whether making a risky choice is based on a weighting and adding process has a long...
We asked participants to make simple risky choices while we recorded their eye movements. We built a...
This thesis examined decision making in the context of forced-choice situations, as characterised by...
Decision making is defined as the mental process of choosing among a set of alternatives. Although s...
People make hundreds of decisions every day, and very little is known about how they do this. A big ...
This study contributes to the understanding of how individuals make choices for themselves and on be...
In recent years, numerous studies comparing intuition and deliberation have been published. However,...
In recent years, numerous studies comparing intuition and deliberation have been published. However,...
Individual differences in cognitive abilities and skills can predict normatively superior and logica...
We asked participants to make simple risky choices while we recorded their eye movements. We built a...
Ideally, people seek and select information about unfamiliar risks with which they are confronted, b...
It has long been assumed in economic theory that multi-attribute decisions involving several attribu...
Human interactions often involve a choice between acting selfishly (in ones' own interest) and actin...
Computational models of decision making typically assume as people deliberate between options they m...
The construct of intuition has gained recent attention in the literature on decision-making and emot...
The debate about whether making a risky choice is based on a weighting and adding process has a long...
We asked participants to make simple risky choices while we recorded their eye movements. We built a...
This thesis examined decision making in the context of forced-choice situations, as characterised by...
Decision making is defined as the mental process of choosing among a set of alternatives. Although s...
People make hundreds of decisions every day, and very little is known about how they do this. A big ...