Hard decisions between equally valued alternatives can result in preference changes, meaning that subsequent valuations for chosen items increase and decrease for rejected items. Previous research suggests that this phenomenon is a consequence of cognitive dissonance reduction after the decision, induced by the mismatch between initial preferences and decision outcomes. In contrast, this functional magnetic resonance imaging and eye-tracking study with male and female human participants found that preferences are already updated online during the process of decision-making. Preference changes were predicted from activity in left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and precuneus while making hard decisions. Fixation durations during this phase pr...
Why do we sometimes opt for actions or items that we do not value the most? Under current neurocompu...
Changes in preference are inherently subjective and internal psychological events. We have identifie...
In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that brain activation would reflect perceptual choice...
Hard decisions between equally valued alternatives can result in preference changes, meaning that su...
© 2018 Dr Katharina VoigtProminent models of decision making claim that choices are based on stable ...
Past research has identified many ways in which decisions are influenced by the context of the decis...
Past research has identified many ways in which decisions are influenced by the context of the decis...
According to many modern economic theories, actions simply reflect an individual's preferences, wher...
When making a difficult choice, people often justify the choice by increasing their liking for the c...
Understanding how option values are compared when making a choice is a key objective for decision ne...
After a person chooses between two items, preference for the chosen item will increase and preferenc...
After a person chooses between two items, preference for the chosen item will increase and preferenc...
Humans tend to modify their attitudes to align with past action. For example, after choosing between...
Changes in preference are inherently subjective and internal psychological events. We have identifie...
Changes in preference are inherently subjective and internal psychological events. We have identifie...
Why do we sometimes opt for actions or items that we do not value the most? Under current neurocompu...
Changes in preference are inherently subjective and internal psychological events. We have identifie...
In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that brain activation would reflect perceptual choice...
Hard decisions between equally valued alternatives can result in preference changes, meaning that su...
© 2018 Dr Katharina VoigtProminent models of decision making claim that choices are based on stable ...
Past research has identified many ways in which decisions are influenced by the context of the decis...
Past research has identified many ways in which decisions are influenced by the context of the decis...
According to many modern economic theories, actions simply reflect an individual's preferences, wher...
When making a difficult choice, people often justify the choice by increasing their liking for the c...
Understanding how option values are compared when making a choice is a key objective for decision ne...
After a person chooses between two items, preference for the chosen item will increase and preferenc...
After a person chooses between two items, preference for the chosen item will increase and preferenc...
Humans tend to modify their attitudes to align with past action. For example, after choosing between...
Changes in preference are inherently subjective and internal psychological events. We have identifie...
Changes in preference are inherently subjective and internal psychological events. We have identifie...
Why do we sometimes opt for actions or items that we do not value the most? Under current neurocompu...
Changes in preference are inherently subjective and internal psychological events. We have identifie...
In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that brain activation would reflect perceptual choice...