| Literature DB >> 28706486 |
Salvador Cruz Rambaud1, María J Muñoz Torrecillas1, Taiki Takahashi2.
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to find a suitable discount function able to describe the progression of a certain addiction or disease under treatment as a discounting process. In effect, a certain indicator related to a disease decays over time in a manner which is mathematically similar to the way in which discounting has been modeled. We analyze the discount functions observed in experiments which study addictive and other problematic behaviors as well as some alternative hyperbola-like discount functions in order to fit the patience exhibited by the subject after receiving the treatment. Additionally, it has been experimentally found that people with addiction display high rates of discount (impatience) and preference reversals (dynamic inconsistency). This excessive discounting must be correctly modeled by a suitable discount function, otherwise, it can become a trans-disease process underlying addiction and other disorders. The (generalized) exponentiated hyperbolic discount function is proposed to describe the progression of a disease with respect to the treatment, since it maintains the property of inconsistency by exhibiting a decreasing discount rate after an initial period in which the opposite occurs.Entities:
Keywords: (generalized) exponentiated hyperbolic discounting; addiction; delay discounting; disease; hazard rate; hyperbolic discounting
Year: 2017 PMID: 28706486 PMCID: PMC5489713 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2017.00416
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.988
Different types of discounting processes.
| Delay of reward | Absolute reward value |
| Current value | |
| Delay to reward | |
| Probability of reward | Absolute reward value |
| Value of probabilistic reward | |
| Probability of reward | |
| Generosity | Money you have |
| Money you give to another person | |
| Social distance from that person | |
| Energy | Source of energy (e.g., light, sound) |
| Energy distant from source | |
| Distance from source | |
| Memory | Original learning |
| Memory | |
| Time between learning and recall | |
| Addiction or disease | Level of addiction |
| Current level | |
| Regular dose/time frequency |
Source: Rachlin (.
Chart 1Parallelism between addictions and diseases. Source: own elaboration.
Figure 1Hyperbolic discounting.
Figure 2Exponentiated hyperbolic discounting.
Figure 3Comparison between exponentiated and simple hyperbolic discounting for the same value of parameter i.
Figure 4Standard dose-response curve.
Figure 5Plotting the progression of a disease.