In this paper, we argue that time-inconsistent preferences in financial decision-making are sensitive to the kind of prospection involved. Given that episodic prospection increases the subjective importance of a future reward (Benoit, Gilbert and Burgess, 2011), we expect that this human faculty is able to reduce hyperbolic discounting biases. Furthermore, we suppose that the role of episodic prospection in reducing hyperbolic discounting may vary depending on the typology of solicited scenarios, environmental conditions and an individual’s personality traits. An experimental task was submitted to a sample of young individuals (N=77; 40 Germans and 33 Italians; average age 22 years, range 18-30), who were asked to make farsighted decisions ...
During intertemporal decisions, the value of future rewards decreases as a function of the delay of ...
Standard economic models view risk taking and time discounting as two independent dimensions of deci...
Considerable evidence suggests that episodic memory and foresight rely on the same underlying cognit...
Individuals often show time-inconsistent preferences when making intertemporal choices for monetary ...
Humans are capable of imagining future rewards and the contexts in which they may be obtained. Funct...
Humans frequently create mental models of the future, allowing outcomes to be inferred in advance of...
Humans often show impatience when making intertemporal choice for monetary rewards, preferring small...
Background There is a near-universal tendency to discount the value of delayed rewards relative to t...
Willingness to take risk is one of the most important aspects of personal financial decisions, espec...
Episodic future thinking (EFT) denotes our capacity to imagine prospective events. It has been sugge...
Many of our everyday choices are associated with outcomes that are both delayed and probabilistic. T...
Human financial decisions are known to deviate from ‘rational’, particularly under uncertainty and i...
BACKGROUND: Humans often show impatience when making intertemporal choice for monetary rewards, pref...
During intertemporal decisions, the value of future rewards decreases as a function of the delay of ...
These data stem from five large studies examining the relation between episodic future thinking and ...
During intertemporal decisions, the value of future rewards decreases as a function of the delay of ...
Standard economic models view risk taking and time discounting as two independent dimensions of deci...
Considerable evidence suggests that episodic memory and foresight rely on the same underlying cognit...
Individuals often show time-inconsistent preferences when making intertemporal choices for monetary ...
Humans are capable of imagining future rewards and the contexts in which they may be obtained. Funct...
Humans frequently create mental models of the future, allowing outcomes to be inferred in advance of...
Humans often show impatience when making intertemporal choice for monetary rewards, preferring small...
Background There is a near-universal tendency to discount the value of delayed rewards relative to t...
Willingness to take risk is one of the most important aspects of personal financial decisions, espec...
Episodic future thinking (EFT) denotes our capacity to imagine prospective events. It has been sugge...
Many of our everyday choices are associated with outcomes that are both delayed and probabilistic. T...
Human financial decisions are known to deviate from ‘rational’, particularly under uncertainty and i...
BACKGROUND: Humans often show impatience when making intertemporal choice for monetary rewards, pref...
During intertemporal decisions, the value of future rewards decreases as a function of the delay of ...
These data stem from five large studies examining the relation between episodic future thinking and ...
During intertemporal decisions, the value of future rewards decreases as a function of the delay of ...
Standard economic models view risk taking and time discounting as two independent dimensions of deci...
Considerable evidence suggests that episodic memory and foresight rely on the same underlying cognit...