Human decision-making is a complex process, of which the neurobiological correlates are not well understood. Several theories have been proposed, among others Prospect theory which assumes a different evaluation of gains and losses of the same value. De Martino et al. tested the influence of the “framing effect” on decision-making and we aimed to replicate their study as some of the findings remained unclear. A general tendency to act in accordance with the frame was shown in a behavioural study. In order to uncover the underlying neural correlates, participants performed the same task in an fMRI scanner. Even though the amygdala could not be linked to framing, increased activity in the ACC when making frame-incongruent decisions was establ...
BACKGROUND: Escalation of commitment is a common bias in human decision making. The present study ex...
Decision making involves selection from sets of options based on current evidence about the state of...
It has now become widely accepted that economic decisions are influenced by cognitive and emotional ...
Human choices are remarkably susceptible to the manner in which options are presented. This so-calle...
Decades of classic economic research have neglected the role of incidental and integral emotional fa...
Abstract: the “framing effect ” is observed when the description of options in terms of gains (posit...
Theory and research implicate both emotional and cognitive processes in risky choice framing effects...
AbstractA paradigmatic example of an emotional bias in decision making is the framing effect, where ...
To explain investing decisions, financial theorists invoke two opposing metrics: expected reward and...
AbstractHumans show substantial deviation from rationality during economic decision making under unc...
Understanding the neurocognitive basis of risk-taking behavior is an important issue, especially in ...
This chapter provides an overview of studies in the field of neuroscience that investigate some of t...
[[abstract]]The framing effect, proposed by Tversky and Kahneman [A. Tversky. D. Kahneman, The frami...
Past research has identified many ways in which decisions are influenced by the context of the decis...
Past research has identified many ways in which decisions are influenced by the context of the decis...
BACKGROUND: Escalation of commitment is a common bias in human decision making. The present study ex...
Decision making involves selection from sets of options based on current evidence about the state of...
It has now become widely accepted that economic decisions are influenced by cognitive and emotional ...
Human choices are remarkably susceptible to the manner in which options are presented. This so-calle...
Decades of classic economic research have neglected the role of incidental and integral emotional fa...
Abstract: the “framing effect ” is observed when the description of options in terms of gains (posit...
Theory and research implicate both emotional and cognitive processes in risky choice framing effects...
AbstractA paradigmatic example of an emotional bias in decision making is the framing effect, where ...
To explain investing decisions, financial theorists invoke two opposing metrics: expected reward and...
AbstractHumans show substantial deviation from rationality during economic decision making under unc...
Understanding the neurocognitive basis of risk-taking behavior is an important issue, especially in ...
This chapter provides an overview of studies in the field of neuroscience that investigate some of t...
[[abstract]]The framing effect, proposed by Tversky and Kahneman [A. Tversky. D. Kahneman, The frami...
Past research has identified many ways in which decisions are influenced by the context of the decis...
Past research has identified many ways in which decisions are influenced by the context of the decis...
BACKGROUND: Escalation of commitment is a common bias in human decision making. The present study ex...
Decision making involves selection from sets of options based on current evidence about the state of...
It has now become widely accepted that economic decisions are influenced by cognitive and emotional ...