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Judgment Dec Making

Introduction

Judgment and Decision Making, 16(1)

INTEREST CATEGORY: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR
POSTING TYPE: TOCs


Veil-of-ignorance reasoning mitigates self-serving bias in resource allocation during the COVID-19 crisis
Karen Huang, Regan M. Bernhard, Netta Barak-Corren, Max Bazerman, Joshua D. Greene [] []

Compliance with COVID-19 prevention guidelines: Active vs. passive risk takers
Ruty Keinan, Tali Idan, Yoella Bereby-Meyer [] []

Accentuation and compatibility: Replication and extensions of Shafir (1993) to rethink choosing versus rejecting paradigms
Subramanya Prasad Chandrashekar, Jasmin Weber, Sze Ying Chan, Won Young Cho, Tsz Ching Connie Chu, Bo Ley Cheng, Gilad Feldman [] []

Attentional shifts and preference reversals: An eye-tracking study
Carlos Alós-Ferrer, Alexander Jaudas, Alexander Ritschel [] []

When two wrongs make a right: The efficiency-consumption gap under separate vs. joint evaluations
Eyal Gamliel, Eyal Pe’er [] []

Myopia drives reckless behavior in response to over-taxation
Mikhail S. Spektor, Dirk U. Wulff [] []

Anchoring without scale distortion
Štěpán Bahník [] []

Steady steps versus sudden shifts: Cooperation in (a)symmetric linear and step-level social dilemmas
Judith Kas, David J. Hardisty, Michel J. J. Handgraaf [] []

The effects of tool comparisons when estimating the likelihood of task success
Shuqi Li, Jane E. Miller, Jillian O’Rourke Stuart, Sean J. Jules, Aaron M. Scherer, Andrew R. Smith, Paul D. Windschitl [] []

How preference change induced by mere action versus inaction persists over time
Zhang Chen, Rob W. Holland, Julian Quandt, Ap Dijksterhuis, Harm Veling [] []