审议
心理学
直觉
价值(数学)
损失厌恶
期望效用假设
冒险
双重过程理论(道德心理学)
认知科学
社会心理学
经济
微观经济学
数理经济学
道德推理
计算机科学
法学
机器学习
政治
政治学
作者
Aikaterini Voudouri,Michał Białek,Wim De Neys
出处
期刊:Cognition
[Elsevier BV]
日期:2024-06-15
卷期号:250: 105837-105837
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.cognition.2024.105837
摘要
Would you take a gamble with a 10% chance to gain $100 and a 90% chance to lose $10? Even though this gamble has a positive expected value, most people would avoid taking it given the high chance of losing money. Popular "fast-and-slow" dual process theories of risky decision making assume that to take expected value into account and avoid a loss aversion bias, people need to deliberate. In this paper we directly test whether reasoners can also consider expected value benefit intuitively, in the absence of deliberation. To do so, we presented participants with bets and lotteries in which they could choose between a risky expected-value-based choice and a safe loss averse option. We used a two-response paradigm where participants made two choices in every trial: an initial intuitive choice under time-pressure and cognitive load and a final choice without constraints where they could freely deliberate. Results showed that in most trials participants were loss averse, both in the intuitive and deliberate stages. However, when people opted for the expected-value-based choice after deliberating, they had predominantly already arrived at this choice intuitively. Additionally, loss averse participants often showed an intuitive sensitivity to expected value (as reflected in decreased confidence). Overall, these results suggest that deliberation is not the primary route for expected-value-based responding in risky decision making. Risky decisions may be better conceptualized as an interplay between different types of "fast" intuitions rather than between two different types of "fast" and "slow" thinking per se.
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