Recent experimental evidence in experience-based decision-making suggests that people are more risk seeking in the gains domain relative to the losses domain. This critical result is at odds with the standard reflection effect observed in description-based choice and explained by Prospect Theory. The so-called reversed-reflection effect has been predicated on the extreme-outcome rule, which suggests that memory biases affect risky choice from experience. To test the general plausibility of the rule, we conducted two experiments examining how the magnitude of prospective outcomes impacts risk preferences. We found that while the reversed-reflection effect was present with small-magnitude payoffs, using payoffs of larger magnitude brought par...
When people make risky decisions based on past experience, they must rely on memory. The nature of t...
Previous research has considered the question of how anticipated regret affects risky decision makin...
In one experiment we studied the extent to which theories of judgment, decision-making and memory ca...
Recent experimental evidence in experience-based decision-making suggests that people are more risk ...
Whether buying stocks or playing the slots, people making real-world risky decisions often rely on t...
People make different decisions when they know the odds of an event occurring, (e.g. t...
Abstract When making decisions on the basis of past experiences, people must rely on their memories....
When faced with risky decisions, people tend to be risk averse for gains and risk seeking for losses...
Extreme stimuli are often more salient in perception and memory than moderate stimuli. In risky choi...
People’s risk preferences differ for choices based on described probabilities versus those based on ...
Extreme stimuli are often more salient in perception and memory than moderate stimuli. In risky choi...
Prospect Theory models behaviour in one-off decisions where outcomes are described. Prospect Theory ...
In three experiments, we studied the extent to which theories of decision making and memory can pred...
In 5 experiments, we studied precautionary decisions in which participants decided whether or not to...
Several findings indicate that value-based decision-making is context-dependent. However, the influe...
When people make risky decisions based on past experience, they must rely on memory. The nature of t...
Previous research has considered the question of how anticipated regret affects risky decision makin...
In one experiment we studied the extent to which theories of judgment, decision-making and memory ca...
Recent experimental evidence in experience-based decision-making suggests that people are more risk ...
Whether buying stocks or playing the slots, people making real-world risky decisions often rely on t...
People make different decisions when they know the odds of an event occurring, (e.g. t...
Abstract When making decisions on the basis of past experiences, people must rely on their memories....
When faced with risky decisions, people tend to be risk averse for gains and risk seeking for losses...
Extreme stimuli are often more salient in perception and memory than moderate stimuli. In risky choi...
People’s risk preferences differ for choices based on described probabilities versus those based on ...
Extreme stimuli are often more salient in perception and memory than moderate stimuli. In risky choi...
Prospect Theory models behaviour in one-off decisions where outcomes are described. Prospect Theory ...
In three experiments, we studied the extent to which theories of decision making and memory can pred...
In 5 experiments, we studied precautionary decisions in which participants decided whether or not to...
Several findings indicate that value-based decision-making is context-dependent. However, the influe...
When people make risky decisions based on past experience, they must rely on memory. The nature of t...
Previous research has considered the question of how anticipated regret affects risky decision makin...
In one experiment we studied the extent to which theories of judgment, decision-making and memory ca...