We provide an overview of fuzzy-trace theory (FTT) and its implications for risk and time preferences, drawing on evidence from behavioral economics, psychology, and neuroscience. FTT’s central construct is mental representation, specifically verbatim (literal surface form) and gist (bottom-line meaning) representations. The differences between these types of representation determine risk and time preferences, in combination with social values as well as developmental and individual differences. In particular, sensitivity to rewards and inhibitory control vary across the life span and across people, but impulsivity and risk taking can be modified by applying principles of FTT. We discuss the origins of FTT in prospect theory and distinguish...
Choice impulsivity is an important subcomponent of the broader construct of impulsivity and is a key...
The leading normative (von Neumann & Morgenstern, 1947) and alternative psychological theories (e.g....
The leading normative (von Neumann & Morgenstern, 1947) and alternative psychological theories (e.g....
In psychology and economics, scholars are increasingly combining behavioral and neuroscientific tech...
Framing effects are inconsistencies in preference across transformations in stimulus content. In thi...
The three chapters in this dissertation discuss and test fuzzy-trace theory's account of riskychoice...
Across three papers and seven experiments, I test predictions based in fuzzy-trace theory that indiv...
Graduation date: 2017The present research sought to investigate individual differences in the way in...
Fuzzy-trace theory postulates that intuitive decision making is at the apex of development. To exami...
Theory—understanding mental processes that drive decisions—is important to help patients and provide...
I take a decision-making approach to consider ways of addressing the “unresolved and dramatic ...
Preferred modes of thinking, otherwise known as biases, have been well documented in adult reasoning...
Fuzzy-trace theory is a dual-process model of memory, reasoning, judgment, and decision making that ...
Measuring temporal discounting through the use of intertemporal choice tasks is now the gold standar...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the American Psychologic...
Choice impulsivity is an important subcomponent of the broader construct of impulsivity and is a key...
The leading normative (von Neumann & Morgenstern, 1947) and alternative psychological theories (e.g....
The leading normative (von Neumann & Morgenstern, 1947) and alternative psychological theories (e.g....
In psychology and economics, scholars are increasingly combining behavioral and neuroscientific tech...
Framing effects are inconsistencies in preference across transformations in stimulus content. In thi...
The three chapters in this dissertation discuss and test fuzzy-trace theory's account of riskychoice...
Across three papers and seven experiments, I test predictions based in fuzzy-trace theory that indiv...
Graduation date: 2017The present research sought to investigate individual differences in the way in...
Fuzzy-trace theory postulates that intuitive decision making is at the apex of development. To exami...
Theory—understanding mental processes that drive decisions—is important to help patients and provide...
I take a decision-making approach to consider ways of addressing the “unresolved and dramatic ...
Preferred modes of thinking, otherwise known as biases, have been well documented in adult reasoning...
Fuzzy-trace theory is a dual-process model of memory, reasoning, judgment, and decision making that ...
Measuring temporal discounting through the use of intertemporal choice tasks is now the gold standar...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the American Psychologic...
Choice impulsivity is an important subcomponent of the broader construct of impulsivity and is a key...
The leading normative (von Neumann & Morgenstern, 1947) and alternative psychological theories (e.g....
The leading normative (von Neumann & Morgenstern, 1947) and alternative psychological theories (e.g....