TOC: Judgement Dec Making
Introduction
Judgement and Decision Making, 10(4)
Improving dynamic decision making through training and self-reflection, pp. 284-295 (html).
–Sarah J. Donovan, C. Dominik Güss and Dag Naslund
The curious tale of Julie and Mark: Unraveling the moral dumbfounding effect, pp. 296-313 (html).
–Edward B. Royzman, Kwanwoo Kim and Robert F. Leeman
Reflective liberals and intuitive conservatives: A look at the Cognitive Reflection Test and ideology, pp. 314-331 (html).
–Kristen D. Deppe, Frank J. Gonzalez, Jayme L. Neiman, Carly Jacobs, Jackson Pahlke, Kevin B. Smith and John R. Hibbing
Cognitive reflection predicts the acceptance of unfair ultimatum game offers, pp. 332-341 (html).
–Dustin P. Calvillo and Jessica N. Burgeno
Type of army service and decision to engage in risky behavior among young people in Israel, pp. 342-354 (html).
–Sharon Garyn-Tal and Shosh Shahrabani
It pays to be nice, but not really nice: Asymmetric reputations from prosociality across 7 countries, pp. 355-364 (html).
–Nadav Klein, Igor Grossmann, Ayse K. Uskul, Alexandra A. Kraus and Nicholas Epley
Divergence between individual perceptions and objective indicators of tail risks: Evidence from floodplain residents in New York City, pp. 365-385 (html).
–W.J. Wouter Botzen, Howard Kunreuther and Erwann Michel-Kerjan
Willingness to test for BRCA1/2 in high risk women: Influenced by risk perception and family experience, rather than by objective or subjective numeracy?, pp. 386-399 (html).
–Talya Miron-Shatz, Yaniv Hanoch, Benjamin A. Katz, Glen M. Doniger and Elissa M. Ozanne
