Publication: Sequential evidence accumulation in decision making: the individual desired level of confidence can explain the extent of information acquisition
Sequential evidence accumulation in decision making: the individual desired level of confidence can explain the extent of information acquisition
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Hausmann-Thürig, D., & Läge, D. (2008). Sequential evidence accumulation in decision making: the individual desired level of confidence can explain the extent of information acquisition. Judgment and Decision Making, 3(3), 229–243. http://journal.sjdm.org/bn4.pdf
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Judgments and decisions under uncertainty are frequently linked to a prior sequential search for relevant information. In such cases, the subject has to decide when to stop the search for information. Evidence accumulation models from social and cognitive psychology assume an active and sequential information search until enough evidence has been accumulated to pass a decision threshold. In line with such theories, we conceptualize the evidence threshold as the “desired level of confidence” (DLC) of a person. This model is tested agai
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Hausmann-Thürig, D., & Läge, D. (2008). Sequential evidence accumulation in decision making: the individual desired level of confidence can explain the extent of information acquisition. Judgment and Decision Making, 3(3), 229–243. http://journal.sjdm.org/bn4.pdf