When faced with risky decisions, people tend to be risk averse for gains and risk seeking for losses (the reflection effect). Studies examining this risk-sensitive decision making, however, typically ask people directly what they would do in hypothetical choice scenarios. A recent flurry of studies has shown that when these risky decisions include rare outcomes, people make different choices for explicitly described probabilities than for experienced probabilistic outcomes. Specifically, rare outcomes are overweighted when described and underweighted when experienced. In two experiments, we examined risk-sensitive decision making when the risky option had two equally probable (50%) outcomes. For experience-based decisions, there was a rever...
People make different decisions when they know the odds of an event occurring, (e.g. t...
When making risky choices, two kinds of information are crucial: outcome values and outcome probabil...
This thesis contributes to the understanding of the ‘Description - Experience (DE) gap’, which posit...
Uncertainty pervades most aspects of life. From selecting a new technology to choosing a career, dec...
Recent research has focused on the "description-experience gap": While rare events are overweighted ...
Uncertainty pervades most aspects of life. From selecting a new technology to choosing a career, de...
Recent experimental evidence in experience-based decision-making suggests that people are more risk ...
Uncertainty pervades most aspects of life. From selecting a new technology to choosing a career, de...
Uncertainty pervades most aspects of life. From selecting a new technology to choosing a career, dec...
Uncertainty pervades most aspects of life. From selecting a new technology to choosing a career, dec...
Uncertainty pervades most aspects of life. From selecting a new technology to choosing a career, dec...
ABSTRACT—When people have access to information sources such as newspaper weather forecasts, drug-pa...
People’s risk preferences differ for choices based on described probabilities versus those based on ...
<p>Recent research in decision making reported a description–experience (DE) gap: opposite risky cho...
Whether buying stocks or playing the slots, people making real-world risky decisions often rely on t...
People make different decisions when they know the odds of an event occurring, (e.g. t...
When making risky choices, two kinds of information are crucial: outcome values and outcome probabil...
This thesis contributes to the understanding of the ‘Description - Experience (DE) gap’, which posit...
Uncertainty pervades most aspects of life. From selecting a new technology to choosing a career, dec...
Recent research has focused on the "description-experience gap": While rare events are overweighted ...
Uncertainty pervades most aspects of life. From selecting a new technology to choosing a career, de...
Recent experimental evidence in experience-based decision-making suggests that people are more risk ...
Uncertainty pervades most aspects of life. From selecting a new technology to choosing a career, de...
Uncertainty pervades most aspects of life. From selecting a new technology to choosing a career, dec...
Uncertainty pervades most aspects of life. From selecting a new technology to choosing a career, dec...
Uncertainty pervades most aspects of life. From selecting a new technology to choosing a career, dec...
ABSTRACT—When people have access to information sources such as newspaper weather forecasts, drug-pa...
People’s risk preferences differ for choices based on described probabilities versus those based on ...
<p>Recent research in decision making reported a description–experience (DE) gap: opposite risky cho...
Whether buying stocks or playing the slots, people making real-world risky decisions often rely on t...
People make different decisions when they know the odds of an event occurring, (e.g. t...
When making risky choices, two kinds of information are crucial: outcome values and outcome probabil...
This thesis contributes to the understanding of the ‘Description - Experience (DE) gap’, which posit...