Thinking Fast Increases Framing Effects in Risky Decision Making

Every day, people face snap decisions when time is a limiting factor. In addition, the way a problem is presented can influence people's choices, which creates what are known as framing effects. In this research, we explored how time pressure interacts with framing effects in risky decision mak...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychological science 2017-04, Vol.28 (4), p.530-543
Hauptverfasser: Guo, Lisa, Trueblood, Jennifer S., Diederich, Adele
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Trueblood, Jennifer S.
Diederich, Adele
description Every day, people face snap decisions when time is a limiting factor. In addition, the way a problem is presented can influence people's choices, which creates what are known as framing effects. In this research, we explored how time pressure interacts with framing effects in risky decision making. Specifically, does time pressure strengthen or weaken framing effects? On one hand, research has suggested that framing effects evolve through the deliberation process, growing larger with time. On the other hand, dual-process theory attributes framing effects to an intuitive, emotional system that responds automatically to stimuli. In our experiments, participants made decisions about gambles framed in terms of either gains or losses, and time pressure was manipulated across blocks. Results showed increased framing effects under time pressure in both hypothetical and incentivized choices, which supports the dual-process hypothesis that these effects arise from a fast, intuitive system.
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subjects Adult
Critical thinking
Decision making
Decision Making - physiology
Female
Frame analysis
Humans
Male
Psychological aspects
Psychomotor Performance - physiology
Risk
Risk-Taking
Time Factors
Young Adult
title Thinking Fast Increases Framing Effects in Risky Decision Making
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