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  4. Feedback influences discriminability and attractiveness components of probability weighting in descriptive choice under risk
 
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Feedback influences discriminability and attractiveness components of probability weighting in descriptive choice under risk

Source
Frontiers in Psychology
Date Issued
2019-01-01
Author(s)
Goyal, Shruti
Miyapuram, Krishna P.  
DOI
10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00962
Volume
10
Issue
APR
Abstract
Our understanding of the decisions made under scenarios where both descriptive and experience-based information are available is very limited. Underweighting of small probabilities was observed in the gain domain when both description and experience were provided. The divergence observed from the prospect theory suggests a need for a separate or modified theory of decision making under risk. Recent studies suggest a possible role of probability weighting in the choice behaviour under risk. We investigated both gain and loss domains with and without feedback for small and large probability conditions. We characterized the shape of the probability weighting function by a two-parameter functional form representing discriminability (concave-convex shape) and attractiveness (level of absolute weights relative to objective probability). We replicated four-fold pattern of risk attitude on non-WEIRD population. We find that feedback leads to underweighting of small probabilities and overweighting of large probabilities in the gain domain and overall underweighting of probabilities in the loss domain. We find that underweighting of small probabilities is driven by changes in discriminability and attractiveness components in the gain domain and changes in the attractiveness component in the loss domain. We have interpreted the results by proposing an updated belief-based account of decisions under uncertainty in which feedback, when available, influences the probability weighting mediating the choice behaviour.
Publication link
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00962
URI
https://d8.irins.org/handle/IITG2025/23375
Subjects
Attractiveness | Description-experience | Descriptive choice | Discriminability | Feedback | Probability weighting | Prospect Theory | Risk
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