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The delay-reward heuristic: What do people expect in intertemporal choice tasks?

Recent research has shown that risk and reward are positively correlated in many environments, and that people have internalized this association as a “risk-reward heuristic”: when making choices based on incomplete information, people infer probabilities from payoffs and vice-versa, and these infer...

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Autores principales: Skylark, William J., Chan, Kieran T.F., Farmer, George D., Gaskin, Kai W., Miller, Amelia R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7116214/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33082904
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author Skylark, William J.
Chan, Kieran T.F.
Farmer, George D.
Gaskin, Kai W.
Miller, Amelia R.
author_facet Skylark, William J.
Chan, Kieran T.F.
Farmer, George D.
Gaskin, Kai W.
Miller, Amelia R.
author_sort Skylark, William J.
collection PubMed
description Recent research has shown that risk and reward are positively correlated in many environments, and that people have internalized this association as a “risk-reward heuristic”: when making choices based on incomplete information, people infer probabilities from payoffs and vice-versa, and these inferences shape their decisions. We extend this work by examining people’s expectations about another fundamental trade-off—that between monetary reward and delay. In 2 experiments (total N = 670), we adapted a paradigm previously used to demonstrate the risk-reward heuristic. We presented participants with intertemporal choice tasks in which either the delayed reward or the length of the delay was obscured. Participants inferred larger rewards for longer stated delays, and longer delays for larger stated rewards; these inferences also predicted people’s willingness to take the delayed option. In exploratory analyses, we found that older participants inferred longer delays and smaller rewards than did younger ones. All of these results replicated in 2 large-scale pre-registered studies with participants from a different population (total N = 2138). Our results suggest that people expect intertemporal choice tasks to offer a trade-off between delay and reward, and differ in their expectations about this trade-off. This “delay-reward heuristic” offers a new perspective on existing models of intertemporal choice and provides new insights into unexplained and systematic individual differences in the willingness to delay gratification.
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spelling pubmed-71162142020-10-19 The delay-reward heuristic: What do people expect in intertemporal choice tasks? Skylark, William J. Chan, Kieran T.F. Farmer, George D. Gaskin, Kai W. Miller, Amelia R. Judgm Decis Mak Article Recent research has shown that risk and reward are positively correlated in many environments, and that people have internalized this association as a “risk-reward heuristic”: when making choices based on incomplete information, people infer probabilities from payoffs and vice-versa, and these inferences shape their decisions. We extend this work by examining people’s expectations about another fundamental trade-off—that between monetary reward and delay. In 2 experiments (total N = 670), we adapted a paradigm previously used to demonstrate the risk-reward heuristic. We presented participants with intertemporal choice tasks in which either the delayed reward or the length of the delay was obscured. Participants inferred larger rewards for longer stated delays, and longer delays for larger stated rewards; these inferences also predicted people’s willingness to take the delayed option. In exploratory analyses, we found that older participants inferred longer delays and smaller rewards than did younger ones. All of these results replicated in 2 large-scale pre-registered studies with participants from a different population (total N = 2138). Our results suggest that people expect intertemporal choice tasks to offer a trade-off between delay and reward, and differ in their expectations about this trade-off. This “delay-reward heuristic” offers a new perspective on existing models of intertemporal choice and provides new insights into unexplained and systematic individual differences in the willingness to delay gratification. 2020-09 /pmc/articles/PMC7116214/ /pubmed/33082904 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This work is licensed under a CC BY 3.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) .
spellingShingle Article
Skylark, William J.
Chan, Kieran T.F.
Farmer, George D.
Gaskin, Kai W.
Miller, Amelia R.
The delay-reward heuristic: What do people expect in intertemporal choice tasks?
title The delay-reward heuristic: What do people expect in intertemporal choice tasks?
title_full The delay-reward heuristic: What do people expect in intertemporal choice tasks?
title_fullStr The delay-reward heuristic: What do people expect in intertemporal choice tasks?
title_full_unstemmed The delay-reward heuristic: What do people expect in intertemporal choice tasks?
title_short The delay-reward heuristic: What do people expect in intertemporal choice tasks?
title_sort delay-reward heuristic: what do people expect in intertemporal choice tasks?
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7116214/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33082904
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