Substantial evidence indicates that information is distorted during decision making. However, no studies have assessed the distortion of outcome and probability information in risky decisions or the effects of ambiguity on information distortion. We report two studies involving six binary decisions (e.g., banning blood donations from people who have visited England, because of “mad cow disease”). In study 1, participants distorted their evaluations of outcome and probability information in the direction of their preferred decision alternative and used these biased evaluations to update their preferences. Participants also evaluated the utilities of possible outcomes more positively when the outcomes could follow only from the preferred alte...
In most medical decisions, probabilities are ambiguous and not objectively known. Empirical evidence...
Positive and negative moods can be treated as prior expectations over future delivery of rewards and...
When faced with a decision, most people like to know the odds and prefer to avoid ambiguity. It has ...
Substantial evidence indicates that information is distorted during decision making. However, no stu...
Substantial evidence indicates that information is distorted during decision making, but very few st...
Decision makers are frequently confronted with ambiguous risk information about activities with pote...
Even in their everyday lives people are expected to make difficult decisions objectively and rationa...
Most daily decisions involve uncertainty about outcome probabilities arising from incomplete knowled...
A great deal of research demonstrates a variety of ways in which people\u27s judgments violate the l...
Information ambiguity is prevalent in organizations and likely influences management decisions. This...
Most daily decisions involve uncertainty about outcome probabilities arising from incomplete knowled...
Information about event probability upon which decisions depend may be more or less precise. The fir...
Recent decision-making research provides empirical evidence that human riskpreferences are construct...
Recent decision-making research provides empirical evidence that human risk preferences are construc...
Recent decision-making research provides empirical evidence that human risk preferences are construc...
In most medical decisions, probabilities are ambiguous and not objectively known. Empirical evidence...
Positive and negative moods can be treated as prior expectations over future delivery of rewards and...
When faced with a decision, most people like to know the odds and prefer to avoid ambiguity. It has ...
Substantial evidence indicates that information is distorted during decision making. However, no stu...
Substantial evidence indicates that information is distorted during decision making, but very few st...
Decision makers are frequently confronted with ambiguous risk information about activities with pote...
Even in their everyday lives people are expected to make difficult decisions objectively and rationa...
Most daily decisions involve uncertainty about outcome probabilities arising from incomplete knowled...
A great deal of research demonstrates a variety of ways in which people\u27s judgments violate the l...
Information ambiguity is prevalent in organizations and likely influences management decisions. This...
Most daily decisions involve uncertainty about outcome probabilities arising from incomplete knowled...
Information about event probability upon which decisions depend may be more or less precise. The fir...
Recent decision-making research provides empirical evidence that human riskpreferences are construct...
Recent decision-making research provides empirical evidence that human risk preferences are construc...
Recent decision-making research provides empirical evidence that human risk preferences are construc...
In most medical decisions, probabilities are ambiguous and not objectively known. Empirical evidence...
Positive and negative moods can be treated as prior expectations over future delivery of rewards and...
When faced with a decision, most people like to know the odds and prefer to avoid ambiguity. It has ...