Literature DB >> 24404941

Weighing outcomes by time or against time? Evaluation rules in intertemporal choice.

Marc Scholten1, Daniel Read, Adam Sanborn.   

Abstract

Models of intertemporal choice draw on three evaluation rules, which we compare in the restricted domain of choices between smaller sooner and larger later monetary outcomes. The hyperbolic discounting model proposes an alternative-based rule, in which options are evaluated separately. The interval discounting model proposes a hybrid rule, in which the outcomes are evaluated separately, but the delays to those outcomes are evaluated in comparison with one another. The tradeoff model proposes an attribute-based rule, in which both outcomes and delays are evaluated in comparison with one another: People consider both the intervals between the outcomes and the compensations received or paid over those intervals. We compare highly general parametric functional forms of these models by means of a Bayesian analysis, a method of analysis not previously used in intertemporal choice. We find that the hyperbolic discounting model is outperformed by the interval discounting model, which, in turn, is outperformed by the tradeoff model. Our cognitive modeling is among the first to offer quantitative evidence against the conventional view that people make intertemporal choices by discounting the value of future outcomes, and in favor of the view that they directly compare options along the time and outcome attributes.
Copyright © 2014 Cognitive Science Society, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Decision making; Human experimentation; Hyperbolic discounting; Intertemporal choice; Mathematical modeling; Psychology

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24404941     DOI: 10.1111/cogs.12104

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cogn Sci        ISSN: 0364-0213


  5 in total

1.  Intertemporal Decision-Making Involves Prefrontal Control Mechanisms Associated with Working Memory.

Authors:  Koji Jimura; Maria S Chushak; Andrew Westbrook; Todd S Braver
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2018-04-01       Impact factor: 5.357

2.  The globalizability of temporal discounting.

Authors:  Kai Ruggeri; Amma Panin; Milica Vdovic; Bojana Većkalov; Nazeer Abdul-Salaam; Jascha Achterberg; Carla Akil; Jolly Amatya; Kanchan Amatya; Thomas Lind Andersen; Sibele D Aquino; Arjoon Arunasalam; Sarah Ashcroft-Jones; Adrian Dahl Askelund; Nélida Ayacaxli; Aseman Bagheri Sheshdeh; Alexander Bailey; Paula Barea Arroyo; Genaro Basulto Mejía; Martina Benvenuti; Mari Louise Berge; Aliya Bermaganbet; Katherine Bibilouri; Ludvig Daae Bjørndal; Sabrina Black; Johanna K Blomster Lyshol; Tymofii Brik; Eike Kofi Buabang; Matthias Burghart; Aslı Bursalıoğlu; Naos Mesfin Buzayu; Martin Čadek; Nathalia Melo de Carvalho; Ana-Maria Cazan; Melis Çetinçelik; Valentino E Chai; Patricia Chen; Shiyi Chen; Georgia Clay; Simone D'Ambrogio; Kaja Damnjanović; Grace Duffy; Tatianna Dugue; Twinkle Dwarkanath; Esther Awazzi Envuladu; Nikola Erceg; Celia Esteban-Serna; Eman Farahat; R A Farrokhnia; Mareyba Fawad; Muhammad Fedryansyah; David Feng; Silvia Filippi; Matías A Fonollá; René Freichel; Lucia Freira; Maja Friedemann; Ziwei Gao; Suwen Ge; Sandra J Geiger; Leya George; Iulia Grabovski; Aleksandra Gracheva; Anastasia Gracheva; Ali Hajian; Nida Hasan; Marlene Hecht; Xinyi Hong; Barbora Hubená; Alexander Gustav Fredriksen Ikonomeas; Sandra Ilić; David Izydorczyk; Lea Jakob; Margo Janssens; Hannes Jarke; Ondřej Kácha; Kalina Nikolova Kalinova; Forget Mingiri Kapingura; Ralitsa Karakasheva; David Oliver Kasdan; Emmanuel Kemel; Peggah Khorrami; Jakub M Krawiec; Nato Lagidze; Aleksandra Lazarević; Aleksandra Lazić; Hyung Seo Lee; Žan Lep; Samuel Lins; Ingvild Sandø Lofthus; Lucía Macchia; Salomé Mamede; Metasebiya Ayele Mamo; Laura Maratkyzy; Silvana Mareva; Shivika Marwaha; Lucy McGill; Sharon McParland; Anișoara Melnic; Sebastian A Meyer; Szymon Mizak; Amina Mohammed; Aizhan Mukhyshbayeva; Joaquin Navajas; Dragana Neshevska; Shehrbano Jamali Niazi; Ana Elsa Nieto Nieves; Franziska Nippold; Julia Oberschulte; Thiago Otto; Riinu Pae; Tsvetelina Panchelieva; Sun Young Park; Daria Stefania Pascu; Irena Pavlović; Marija B Petrović; Dora Popović; Gerhard M Prinz; Nikolay R Rachev; Pika Ranc; Josip Razum; Christina Eun Rho; Leonore Riitsalu; Federica Rocca; R Shayna Rosenbaum; James Rujimora; Binahayati Rusyidi; Charlotte Rutherford; Rand Said; Inés Sanguino; Ahmet Kerem Sarikaya; Nicolas Say; Jakob Schuck; Mary Shiels; Yarden Shir; Elisabeth D C Sievert; Irina Soboleva; Tina Solomonia; Siddhant Soni; Irem Soysal; Federica Stablum; Felicia T A Sundström; Xintong Tang; Felice Tavera; Jacqueline Taylor; Anna-Lena Tebbe; Katrine Krabbe Thommesen; Juliette Tobias-Webb; Anna Louise Todsen; Filippo Toscano; Tran Tran; Jason Trinh; Alice Turati; Kohei Ueda; Martina Vacondio; Volodymyr Vakhitov; Adrianna J Valencia; Chiara Van Reyn; Tina A G Venema; Sanne E Verra; Jáchym Vintr; Marek A Vranka; Lisa Wagner; Xue Wu; Ke Ying Xing; Kailin Xu; Sonya Xu; Yuki Yamada; Aleksandra Yosifova; Zorana Zupan; Eduardo García-Garzon
Journal:  Nat Hum Behav       Date:  2022-07-11

3.  Cumulative weighing of time in intertemporal tradeoffs.

Authors:  Marc Scholten; Daniel Read; Adam Sanborn
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Gen       Date:  2016-09

4.  Improving Self-Control: The Influence of Role Models on Intertemporal Choices.

Authors:  Gayannée Kedia; Hilmar Brohmer; Marc Scholten; Katja Corcoran
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2019-08-02

5.  Search predicts and changes patience in intertemporal choice.

Authors:  Crystal Reeck; Daniel Wall; Eric J Johnson
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2017-10-23       Impact factor: 11.205

  5 in total

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