Decision makers are influenced by the frame of information such that preferences vary depending on whether survival or mortality data are presented. Research is inconsistent as to whether and how age impacts framing effects. This paper presents two studies that used qualitative analyses of think-aloud protocols to understand how the type of information used in the decision making process varies by frame and age. In Study 1, 40 older adults, age 65 to 89, and 40 younger adults, age 18 to 24, responded to a hypothetical lung cancer scenario in a within-subject design. Participants received both a survival and mortality frame. Qualitative analyses revealed that two main decisional strategies were used by all participants: one strategy reflecte...
Decisional strategy determines whether frame influences treatment preferences for medical decision
Background Humans often display irrational choice and decision-making due to the frame effect. Howev...
Are older adults ’ decision abilities fundamentally compromised by age-related cognitive decline? Or...
Older and younger adults are susceptible to a decisional bias when faced with medical decisions, whi...
This 2 phase study was designed to explore age-related differences in medical treatment choices due ...
The framing effect is a common decisional bias. In the current study, the framing effect and its avo...
A growing literature on decision-making in older adults suggests that they are more likely to use he...
The framing effect in medical decision making was examined using individual and collaborative older ...
The effect of frame, or the way in which options are worded, has been shown to influence decisions i...
Factors that contribute to overcoming decision-making biases in later life pose an important investi...
Background: Older adults are stereotypically considered to be risk averse compared to younger age gr...
Background: Recent research demonstrates that people sometimes make different medical decisions for ...
Decisional strategy determines whether frame influences treatment preferences for medical decision
The present study used a between-subjects design with three instruction conditions to investigate su...
Leading theory hypothesizes that age deficits in decision making may rise as the complexity of decis...
Decisional strategy determines whether frame influences treatment preferences for medical decision
Background Humans often display irrational choice and decision-making due to the frame effect. Howev...
Are older adults ’ decision abilities fundamentally compromised by age-related cognitive decline? Or...
Older and younger adults are susceptible to a decisional bias when faced with medical decisions, whi...
This 2 phase study was designed to explore age-related differences in medical treatment choices due ...
The framing effect is a common decisional bias. In the current study, the framing effect and its avo...
A growing literature on decision-making in older adults suggests that they are more likely to use he...
The framing effect in medical decision making was examined using individual and collaborative older ...
The effect of frame, or the way in which options are worded, has been shown to influence decisions i...
Factors that contribute to overcoming decision-making biases in later life pose an important investi...
Background: Older adults are stereotypically considered to be risk averse compared to younger age gr...
Background: Recent research demonstrates that people sometimes make different medical decisions for ...
Decisional strategy determines whether frame influences treatment preferences for medical decision
The present study used a between-subjects design with three instruction conditions to investigate su...
Leading theory hypothesizes that age deficits in decision making may rise as the complexity of decis...
Decisional strategy determines whether frame influences treatment preferences for medical decision
Background Humans often display irrational choice and decision-making due to the frame effect. Howev...
Are older adults ’ decision abilities fundamentally compromised by age-related cognitive decline? Or...