This communication focuses on a fundamental problem related to the recently introduced Reference-Dependent Regret Model (RDRM) [Kujawski, 2005] for deterministic multi-criteria decision making. In [Kujawski, 2005] it was asserted that the RDRM model satisfies three properties. The first of these properties, referred to as the “independence of dominated alternatives”, seems to be an intuitive one. According to this property, the RDRM model preserves the ranking of two alternatives Ai and Aj with ranking Ai Afj when a new alternative dominated by Ai is introduced or an old alternative dominated by Aj is dropped. In this communication it is demonstrated algebraically and also by means of a numerical example that the RDRM model may fail to sati...
Random regret minimization models (RRMs), based on seminal work in regret theory, have been introduc...
This paper derives a trick to account for variation in choice set size in Random Regret Minimization...
Before starting the debate, we would like to state explicitly that we share Chorus and Cranenburgh’s...
Today's typical multi-criteria decision analysis is based on classical expected utility theory that ...
Recently introduced regret-based choice models in transportation research have invariably and uncrit...
Incorporation of the behavioral issues of the decision maker (DM) is among the aspects that each Mul...
Random regret minimization models have mostly relied on the assumption of identically and independen...
Random regret minimization models have mostly relied on the assumption of identically and independen...
Behaviorally, regret-based choice models implicitly assume that individuals anticipate the amount of...
To better understand individuals’ decision behavior, bounded rational decision models are getting in...
textThis dissertation consists of three research papers on Preference models of decision making, all...
In this post scrit, the authors discuss an article by Hotaling, Busemeyer, and Li (see record 2010-2...
The work detailled on this thesis is about the study of preference aggregation models using referenc...
\u3cp\u3eThis paper elaborates the classic regret-minimizing model introduced in transportation rese...
Random regret minimization models (RRMs), based on seminal work in regret theory, have been introduc...
Random regret minimization models (RRMs), based on seminal work in regret theory, have been introduc...
This paper derives a trick to account for variation in choice set size in Random Regret Minimization...
Before starting the debate, we would like to state explicitly that we share Chorus and Cranenburgh’s...
Today's typical multi-criteria decision analysis is based on classical expected utility theory that ...
Recently introduced regret-based choice models in transportation research have invariably and uncrit...
Incorporation of the behavioral issues of the decision maker (DM) is among the aspects that each Mul...
Random regret minimization models have mostly relied on the assumption of identically and independen...
Random regret minimization models have mostly relied on the assumption of identically and independen...
Behaviorally, regret-based choice models implicitly assume that individuals anticipate the amount of...
To better understand individuals’ decision behavior, bounded rational decision models are getting in...
textThis dissertation consists of three research papers on Preference models of decision making, all...
In this post scrit, the authors discuss an article by Hotaling, Busemeyer, and Li (see record 2010-2...
The work detailled on this thesis is about the study of preference aggregation models using referenc...
\u3cp\u3eThis paper elaborates the classic regret-minimizing model introduced in transportation rese...
Random regret minimization models (RRMs), based on seminal work in regret theory, have been introduc...
Random regret minimization models (RRMs), based on seminal work in regret theory, have been introduc...
This paper derives a trick to account for variation in choice set size in Random Regret Minimization...
Before starting the debate, we would like to state explicitly that we share Chorus and Cranenburgh’s...