Standard economic thinking postulates that increased monetary incentives should increase performance. Human decision makers, however, frequently focus on past performance, a form of reinforcement learning occasionally at odds with rational decision making. We used an incentivized belief-updating task from economics to investigate this conflict through measurements of neural correlates of reward processing. We found that higher incentives fail to improve performance when immediate feedback on decision outcomes is provided. Subsequent analysis of the feedback-related negativity, an early event-related potential following feedback, revealed the mechanism behind this paradoxical effect. As incentives increase, the win/lose feedback becomes more...
We review 74 experiments with no, low, or high performance-based financial incentives. The modal res...
Computational models of learning have proved largely successful in characterizing potential mechanis...
Intuitively, most people assume that offering monetary rewards is a good way to motivate others to i...
Standard economic thinking postulates that increased monetary incentives should increase performance...
We report the results of two pre-registered experiments designed to study the reinforcement paradox:...
When confronted with new information, rational decision makers should update their beliefs through B...
Employers often make payment contingent on performance in order to motivate workers. We used fMRI ...
Human behavior is influenced by both internal and external motivating factors, such as desire to suc...
Performance-based pay schemes in many organizations share the fundamental assumption that the perfor...
A pernicious paradox in human motivation is the occasional reduced performance associated with tasks...
SummaryEmployers often make payment contingent on performance in order to motivate workers. We used ...
lthough the performance of simple cognitive tasks can be enhanced if an incentive is provided, the m...
Economic approaches to decision making assume that people attach values to prospective goods and act...
Economic approaches to decision making assume that people attach values to prospective goods and act...
Economists often espouse incentives, arguing that expanding choice sets cannot lower welfare. Yet, l...
We review 74 experiments with no, low, or high performance-based financial incentives. The modal res...
Computational models of learning have proved largely successful in characterizing potential mechanis...
Intuitively, most people assume that offering monetary rewards is a good way to motivate others to i...
Standard economic thinking postulates that increased monetary incentives should increase performance...
We report the results of two pre-registered experiments designed to study the reinforcement paradox:...
When confronted with new information, rational decision makers should update their beliefs through B...
Employers often make payment contingent on performance in order to motivate workers. We used fMRI ...
Human behavior is influenced by both internal and external motivating factors, such as desire to suc...
Performance-based pay schemes in many organizations share the fundamental assumption that the perfor...
A pernicious paradox in human motivation is the occasional reduced performance associated with tasks...
SummaryEmployers often make payment contingent on performance in order to motivate workers. We used ...
lthough the performance of simple cognitive tasks can be enhanced if an incentive is provided, the m...
Economic approaches to decision making assume that people attach values to prospective goods and act...
Economic approaches to decision making assume that people attach values to prospective goods and act...
Economists often espouse incentives, arguing that expanding choice sets cannot lower welfare. Yet, l...
We review 74 experiments with no, low, or high performance-based financial incentives. The modal res...
Computational models of learning have proved largely successful in characterizing potential mechanis...
Intuitively, most people assume that offering monetary rewards is a good way to motivate others to i...