The relation between decision making under ambiguity and risky decision making was examined. In Studies I and 2, choices under ambiguity were measured for a large sample receiving an Ellsberg-type Ambiguity-Probability Tradeoff Task. Participants with extreme scores were recruited for Part 2 of each study which consisted of a risky decision making task (Study 1) or a series of decisions under ambiguity in "real life" scenarios (Study 2). Despite a time gap of up to 2 months, individual differences in scores on Part I predicted scores on Part 2. In Study 3 participants received in a single session several risky decision making tasks, several measures of decision making under ambiguity, and several personality scales related to uncertainty and decision making style. Taken together, the findings support the existence of a stable dispositional trait to reduce uncertainty in decision making but also task-specific differences related to gains and losses. (C) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Common and distinct factors in decision making under ambiguity and risk: A psychometric study of individual differences / Lauriola, Marco; Irwin P., Levin; Stephanie S., Hart. - In: ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR AND HUMAN DECISION PROCESSES. - ISSN 0749-5978. - 104:2(2007), pp. 130-149. [10.1016/j.obhdp.2007.04.001]
Common and distinct factors in decision making under ambiguity and risk: A psychometric study of individual differences
LAURIOLA, Marco;
2007
Abstract
The relation between decision making under ambiguity and risky decision making was examined. In Studies I and 2, choices under ambiguity were measured for a large sample receiving an Ellsberg-type Ambiguity-Probability Tradeoff Task. Participants with extreme scores were recruited for Part 2 of each study which consisted of a risky decision making task (Study 1) or a series of decisions under ambiguity in "real life" scenarios (Study 2). Despite a time gap of up to 2 months, individual differences in scores on Part I predicted scores on Part 2. In Study 3 participants received in a single session several risky decision making tasks, several measures of decision making under ambiguity, and several personality scales related to uncertainty and decision making style. Taken together, the findings support the existence of a stable dispositional trait to reduce uncertainty in decision making but also task-specific differences related to gains and losses. (C) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.