A central puzzle for theories of choice is that people's preferences between options can be reversed by the presence of decoy options (that are not chosen) or by the presence of other irrelevant options added to the choice set. Three types of reversal effect reported in the decision-making literature, the attraction, compromise, and similarity effects, have been explained by a number of theoretical proposals. Yet a major theoretical challenge is capturing all 3 effects simultaneously. We review the range of mechanisms that have been proposed to account for decoy effects and analyze in detail 2 computational models, decision field theory (Roe, Busemeyer, and Townsend, 2001) and leaky competing accumulators (Usher and McClelland, 2004), that ...
Trueblood, Brown, and Heathcote (2014) developed a new model, called the multiattribute linear balli...
The paper shows that: (1) The preference reversal phenomenon is consistent with transitive preferenc...
This paper sheds new light on the preference reversal phenomenon by analyzing decision times in the ...
A central puzzle for theories of choice is that people's preferences between options can be reversed...
A central puzzle for theories of choice is that people's preferences between options can be reversed...
When people express a preference between two alternatives A and B in terms of a positive choice of o...
Trueblood, Brown, and Heathcote (2014) provide a new model of multiattribute choice, which accounts ...
In the present study the authors investigated the influence of the attraction effect, in which a dec...
In this post scrit, the authors discuss an article by Hotaling, Busemeyer, and Li (see record 2010-2...
In accounting for phenomena present in preferential choice experiments, modern models assume a wide ...
The attraction effect emerges when adding a seemingly irrelevant option (decoy) to a binary choice s...
Decisions between two economic goods can be swayed by a third unavailable ‘decoy’ alternative, which...
This article develops a rational analysis of an important class of apparent preference reversals—joi...
The attraction effect shows that adding a third alternative to a choice set can alter preference bet...
The attraction effect emerges when adding a seemingly irrelevant option(decoy) to a binary choice sh...
Trueblood, Brown, and Heathcote (2014) developed a new model, called the multiattribute linear balli...
The paper shows that: (1) The preference reversal phenomenon is consistent with transitive preferenc...
This paper sheds new light on the preference reversal phenomenon by analyzing decision times in the ...
A central puzzle for theories of choice is that people's preferences between options can be reversed...
A central puzzle for theories of choice is that people's preferences between options can be reversed...
When people express a preference between two alternatives A and B in terms of a positive choice of o...
Trueblood, Brown, and Heathcote (2014) provide a new model of multiattribute choice, which accounts ...
In the present study the authors investigated the influence of the attraction effect, in which a dec...
In this post scrit, the authors discuss an article by Hotaling, Busemeyer, and Li (see record 2010-2...
In accounting for phenomena present in preferential choice experiments, modern models assume a wide ...
The attraction effect emerges when adding a seemingly irrelevant option (decoy) to a binary choice s...
Decisions between two economic goods can be swayed by a third unavailable ‘decoy’ alternative, which...
This article develops a rational analysis of an important class of apparent preference reversals—joi...
The attraction effect shows that adding a third alternative to a choice set can alter preference bet...
The attraction effect emerges when adding a seemingly irrelevant option(decoy) to a binary choice sh...
Trueblood, Brown, and Heathcote (2014) developed a new model, called the multiattribute linear balli...
The paper shows that: (1) The preference reversal phenomenon is consistent with transitive preferenc...
This paper sheds new light on the preference reversal phenomenon by analyzing decision times in the ...