According to the ‘Description–Experience gap’ (DE gap), when people are provided with the descriptions of risky prospects they make choices as if they overweight the probability of rare events; but when making decisions from experience after exploring the prospects’ properties, they behave as if they underweight such probability. This study revisits this discrepancy while focusing on information-search in decisions from experience. We report findings from a lab-experiment with three treatments: a standard version of decisions from description and two versions of decisions from experience: with and without a ‘history table’ recording previously sampled events. We find that people sample more from lotteries with rarer events. The history tabl...
When making risky choices, two kinds of information are crucial: outcome values and outcome probabil...
Recent research has focused on the "description-experience gap": While rare events are overweighted ...
The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of numeracy and the emotion of fear on the decis...
According to the ‘Description–Experience gap’ (DE gap), when people are provided with the descriptio...
This thesis contributes to the understanding of the ‘Description - Experience (DE) gap’, which posit...
How do changes in choice-set size influence information search and subsequent decisions? Moreover, d...
Do different patterns of sampling influence the decisions people make, even when the information the...
When people make decisions under uncertainty, they can relate to their expectations about and experi...
Research shows that people tend to overweight small probabilities in description and underweight the...
The Description-Experience gap (DE gap) is widely thought of as a tendency for people to act as if o...
In an experiment with more than 500 participants we study how past experience of uncertainty (imperf...
Subjective inferences of probability play a critical role in decision-making. How we learn about cho...
Recent research in decision making reported a description–experience (DE) gap: opposite risky choice...
It is commonly assumed that there are qualitatively distinct cognitive strategies that underlie deci...
People often attach a higher value to an object when they own it (i.e., as seller) compared with whe...
When making risky choices, two kinds of information are crucial: outcome values and outcome probabil...
Recent research has focused on the "description-experience gap": While rare events are overweighted ...
The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of numeracy and the emotion of fear on the decis...
According to the ‘Description–Experience gap’ (DE gap), when people are provided with the descriptio...
This thesis contributes to the understanding of the ‘Description - Experience (DE) gap’, which posit...
How do changes in choice-set size influence information search and subsequent decisions? Moreover, d...
Do different patterns of sampling influence the decisions people make, even when the information the...
When people make decisions under uncertainty, they can relate to their expectations about and experi...
Research shows that people tend to overweight small probabilities in description and underweight the...
The Description-Experience gap (DE gap) is widely thought of as a tendency for people to act as if o...
In an experiment with more than 500 participants we study how past experience of uncertainty (imperf...
Subjective inferences of probability play a critical role in decision-making. How we learn about cho...
Recent research in decision making reported a description–experience (DE) gap: opposite risky choice...
It is commonly assumed that there are qualitatively distinct cognitive strategies that underlie deci...
People often attach a higher value to an object when they own it (i.e., as seller) compared with whe...
When making risky choices, two kinds of information are crucial: outcome values and outcome probabil...
Recent research has focused on the "description-experience gap": While rare events are overweighted ...
The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of numeracy and the emotion of fear on the decis...