Economic Decision-Making Compared with an Equivalent Motor Task

There is considerable evidence that human economic decisionmaking deviates from the predictions of expected utility theory (EUT) and that human performance conforms to EUT in many perceptual and motor decision tasks. It is possible that these results reflect a real difference in decision-making in t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2009-04, Vol.106 (15), p.6088-6093
Hauptverfasser: Wu, Shih-Wei, Delgado, Mauricio R., Maloney, Laurence T., Dixit, Avinash K.
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container_issue 15
container_start_page 6088
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creator Wu, Shih-Wei
Delgado, Mauricio R.
Maloney, Laurence T.
Dixit, Avinash K.
description There is considerable evidence that human economic decisionmaking deviates from the predictions of expected utility theory (EUT) and that human performance conforms to EUT in many perceptual and motor decision tasks. It is possible that these results reflect a real difference in decision-making in the 2 domains but it is also possible that the observed discrepancy simply reflects typical differences in experimental design. We developed a motor task that is mathematically equivalent to choosing between lotteries and used it to compare how the same subject chose between classical economic lotteries and the same lotteries presented in equivalent motor form. In experiment 1, we found that subjects are more risk seeking in deciding between motor lotteries. In experiment 2, we used cumulative prospect theory to model choice and separately estimated the probability weighting functions and the value functions for each subject carrying out each task. We found no patterned differences in how subjects represented outcome value in the motor and the classical tasks. However, the probability weighting functions for motor and classical tasks were markedly and significantly different. Those for the classical task showed a typical tendency to overweight small probabilities and underweight large probabilities, and those for the motor task showed the opposite pattern of probability distortion. This outcome also accounts for the increased risk-seeking observed in the motor tasks of experiment 1. We conclude that the same subject distorts probability, but not value, differently in making identical decisions in motor and classical form.
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subjects Classical economics
Decision Making
Economic models
Economic value
Expected utility
Experiment design
Experimentation
Experiments
Female
Human performance
Humans
Lotteries
Male
Models, Biological
Motor ability
Motor Activity - physiology
Prospect theory
Recreation - psychology
Risk aversion
Social Sciences
Utility functions
Weighting functions
title Economic Decision-Making Compared with an Equivalent Motor Task
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