In search of the preference reversal zone
In search of the preference reversal zone
A preference reversal is observed when a preference for a larger-later reward over a smaller-sooner reward reverses as both rewards come closer in time. Preference reversals are common in everyday life and in the laboratory, and are often claimed to support hyperbolic delay-discounting models which, in their simplest form, can model reversals with only one free parameter. However, it is not clear if the temporal location of preference reversals can be predicted a priori. Studies testing model predictions have not found support for them but they overlooked the well-documented effect of reinforcer magnitude on discounting rate. Therefore we directly tested hyperbolic and exponential model predictions in a pre-registered study by assessing individual discount rates for two reinforcer magnitudes. We then made individualised predictions about pairs of choices between which preference reversal should occur. With 107 participants we found 1) little evidence that hyperbolic and exponential models could predict the temporal location of preference reversals, 2) some evidence that hyperbolic models had better predictive performance than exponential models, and 3) in contrast to many previous studies, that exponential models generally produced superior fits to the observed data than hyperbolic models.
delay discounting, preference reversal, hyperbolic discounting, exponential discounting
46-59
Glautier, Steven
964468b2-3ad7-40cc-b4be-e35c7dee518f
Eisenbarth, Hedwig
b582defd-faa3-41d3-9ccc-9f5978f5d110
Macaskill, Anne
c1dee8e5-922e-424a-b540-76dedaa4cb9a
17 May 2022
Glautier, Steven
964468b2-3ad7-40cc-b4be-e35c7dee518f
Eisenbarth, Hedwig
b582defd-faa3-41d3-9ccc-9f5978f5d110
Macaskill, Anne
c1dee8e5-922e-424a-b540-76dedaa4cb9a
Glautier, Steven, Eisenbarth, Hedwig and Macaskill, Anne
(2022)
In search of the preference reversal zone.
Experimental Psychology, 69 (1), .
(doi:10.1027/1618-3169/a000542).
Abstract
A preference reversal is observed when a preference for a larger-later reward over a smaller-sooner reward reverses as both rewards come closer in time. Preference reversals are common in everyday life and in the laboratory, and are often claimed to support hyperbolic delay-discounting models which, in their simplest form, can model reversals with only one free parameter. However, it is not clear if the temporal location of preference reversals can be predicted a priori. Studies testing model predictions have not found support for them but they overlooked the well-documented effect of reinforcer magnitude on discounting rate. Therefore we directly tested hyperbolic and exponential model predictions in a pre-registered study by assessing individual discount rates for two reinforcer magnitudes. We then made individualised predictions about pairs of choices between which preference reversal should occur. With 107 participants we found 1) little evidence that hyperbolic and exponential models could predict the temporal location of preference reversals, 2) some evidence that hyperbolic models had better predictive performance than exponential models, and 3) in contrast to many previous studies, that exponential models generally produced superior fits to the observed data than hyperbolic models.
Text
GlautierEisenbarthMacaskillEPResults
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 17 February 2022
Published date: 17 May 2022
Keywords:
delay discounting, preference reversal, hyperbolic discounting, exponential discounting
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 455290
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/455290
ISSN: 1618-3169
PURE UUID: 3d922734-bd83-462c-adae-5861f08bf992
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Date deposited: 16 Mar 2022 18:00
Last modified: 29 Oct 2024 02:36
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Author:
Hedwig Eisenbarth
Author:
Anne Macaskill
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