Many natural activities involve "stopping dilemmas": situations that require a repeated decision between investing effort to achieve some valued goal and stopping that effort to try something else. Previous research into these problems highlights two contradicting biases. While one class of studies suggests a tendency to stop too late (e.g., escalation of commitment), another class of studies suggests a tendency to give up too early (e.g., learned helplessness). Our paper clarifies the conditions that trigger these biases by focusing on two factors: the decision mode (ongoing decisions vs. planning in advance) and the probability each search effort will be costly. We find that experience with stopping dilemmas produces a reversed sunk-cost ...
This research examines the phenomenon of interruptions and suspensions in decision making. It is pro...
Intertemporal choice impacts many important outcomes, such as decisions about health, education, wea...
Recent experiments suggest that search direction causally affects the discounted valuation of delaye...
It is widely known that the feedback from a decision outcome may evoke emotions like regret, which r...
This paper analyzes a stopping problem where the decision maker is driven by anticipated ex-post reg...
Real-life decision-making often comprises sequences of successive decisions about whether to take op...
We study how people terminate their search for information when making decisions in a changing envir...
The ending effect describes the phenomenon that at the end of a series of repeated risky decision-ma...
When faced with a decision, people collect information to help them decide. Though it may seem unnec...
The Escalation of Commitment Phenomenon describes the tendency for people to increase their investme...
Research indicates that when decision makers are faced with a second opportunity to invest in a proj...
Humans face sequential decision making tasks where they cannot return to a previous option on a dail...
Insufficient exploration of one's surroundings is at the root of many real-life problems, as demonst...
When faced with a decision, people collect information to help them decide. Though it may seem unnec...
Do different patterns of sampling influence the decisions people make, even when the information the...
This research examines the phenomenon of interruptions and suspensions in decision making. It is pro...
Intertemporal choice impacts many important outcomes, such as decisions about health, education, wea...
Recent experiments suggest that search direction causally affects the discounted valuation of delaye...
It is widely known that the feedback from a decision outcome may evoke emotions like regret, which r...
This paper analyzes a stopping problem where the decision maker is driven by anticipated ex-post reg...
Real-life decision-making often comprises sequences of successive decisions about whether to take op...
We study how people terminate their search for information when making decisions in a changing envir...
The ending effect describes the phenomenon that at the end of a series of repeated risky decision-ma...
When faced with a decision, people collect information to help them decide. Though it may seem unnec...
The Escalation of Commitment Phenomenon describes the tendency for people to increase their investme...
Research indicates that when decision makers are faced with a second opportunity to invest in a proj...
Humans face sequential decision making tasks where they cannot return to a previous option on a dail...
Insufficient exploration of one's surroundings is at the root of many real-life problems, as demonst...
When faced with a decision, people collect information to help them decide. Though it may seem unnec...
Do different patterns of sampling influence the decisions people make, even when the information the...
This research examines the phenomenon of interruptions and suspensions in decision making. It is pro...
Intertemporal choice impacts many important outcomes, such as decisions about health, education, wea...
Recent experiments suggest that search direction causally affects the discounted valuation of delaye...