| Literature DB >> 31024120 |
Andreas Pedroni1,2, Renato Frey3,4, Adrian Bruhin5, Gilles Dutilh6, Ralph Hertwig4,5, Jörg Rieskamp6.
Abstract
Evidence shows that people's preference for risk changes considerably when measured using different methods, which led us to question whether the common practice of using a single behavioural elicitation method (EM) reflects a valid measure. The present study addresses this question by examining the across-methods consistency of observed risk preferences in 1,507 healthy participants using six EMs. Our analyses show that risk preferences are not consistent across methods when operationalized on an absolute scale, a rank scale or the level of model parameters of cumulative prospect theory. This is at least partly explained by the finding that participants do not consistently follow the same decision strategy across EMs. After controlling for methodological and human factors that may impede consistency, our results challenge the view that different EMs manage to stably capture risk preference. Instead, we interpret the results as suggesting that risk preferences may be constructed when they are elicited, and different cognitive processes can lead to varying preferences.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 31024120 DOI: 10.1038/s41562-017-0219-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Hum Behav ISSN: 2397-3374