Temporal preferences of animals and humans often exhibit inconsistencies, whereby an earlier, smaller reward may be preferred when it occurs immediately but not when it is delayed. Such choices reflect hyperbolic discounting of future rewards, rather than the exponential discounting required for temporal consistency. Simultaneously, however, evidence has emerged that suggests that animals and humans have an internal representation of time that often differs from the calendar time used in detection of temporal inconsistencies. Here, we prove that temporal inconsistencies emerge if fixed durations in calendar time are experienced as positively related (positive quadrant dependent). Hence, what are time-consistent choices within the time frame...
Answering how animal brains measure the passage of time, and, make decisions about the timing of rew...
† This paper was previously entitled “Uncertainty, Waiting Costs, and Hyperbolic Discounting.” We pr...
Recent research on intertemporal choice (e.g., Ainslie, 1991; Herrnstein, 1990; Loewenstein & El...
Extant theories of intertemporal choice entangle two aspects of time preference: impatience and time...
The current article focuses on the role of anticipatory time perception in temporal discounting. We ...
Neuroscientific studies of intertemporal choice (IC) have focused mainly on the neural representatio...
A well-known common agreement in decision theory is that only exponential decision makers are time c...
Time discounting is the phenomenon that a desired result in the future is perceived as less valuable...
htmlabstractTime discounting is the phenomenon that a desired result in the future is perceived as ...
A large number of studies have demonstrated that intertemporal decision making process usually resul...
We describe a new anomaly in intertemporal choice: the “date/delay effect:” Future outcomes are disc...
Time discounting is at the heart of economic decision-making. We disentangle hyperbolic discounting ...
Intertemporal choices are those decisions structured over several periods in which the effects only...
Delay-discounting studies in neuroscience, psychology, and economics have been mostly focused on con...
Recent research in economics and psychology reveals that people and animals may evaluate choices inc...
Answering how animal brains measure the passage of time, and, make decisions about the timing of rew...
† This paper was previously entitled “Uncertainty, Waiting Costs, and Hyperbolic Discounting.” We pr...
Recent research on intertemporal choice (e.g., Ainslie, 1991; Herrnstein, 1990; Loewenstein & El...
Extant theories of intertemporal choice entangle two aspects of time preference: impatience and time...
The current article focuses on the role of anticipatory time perception in temporal discounting. We ...
Neuroscientific studies of intertemporal choice (IC) have focused mainly on the neural representatio...
A well-known common agreement in decision theory is that only exponential decision makers are time c...
Time discounting is the phenomenon that a desired result in the future is perceived as less valuable...
htmlabstractTime discounting is the phenomenon that a desired result in the future is perceived as ...
A large number of studies have demonstrated that intertemporal decision making process usually resul...
We describe a new anomaly in intertemporal choice: the “date/delay effect:” Future outcomes are disc...
Time discounting is at the heart of economic decision-making. We disentangle hyperbolic discounting ...
Intertemporal choices are those decisions structured over several periods in which the effects only...
Delay-discounting studies in neuroscience, psychology, and economics have been mostly focused on con...
Recent research in economics and psychology reveals that people and animals may evaluate choices inc...
Answering how animal brains measure the passage of time, and, make decisions about the timing of rew...
† This paper was previously entitled “Uncertainty, Waiting Costs, and Hyperbolic Discounting.” We pr...
Recent research on intertemporal choice (e.g., Ainslie, 1991; Herrnstein, 1990; Loewenstein & El...