10 research outputs found

    Risk, time pressure, and selection effects

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    Time pressure is a central aspect of economic decision making nowadays. It is therefore natural to ask how time pressure affects decisions, and how to detect individual heterogeneity in the ability to successfully cope with time pressure. In the context of risky decisions, we ask whether a person’s performance under time pressure can be predicted by measurable behavior and traits, and whether such measurement itself may be affected by selection issues. We find that the ability to cope with time pressure varies significantly across decision makers, leading to selected subgroups that differ in terms of their observed behaviors and personal traits. Moreover, measures of cognitive ability and intellectual efficiency jointly predict individuals’ decision quality and ability to keep their decision strategy under time pressure

    The use of in silico genome-scale models for the rational design of minimal cells

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    Governance of Slow-Developing Catastrophic Risks: Fostering Complex Adaptive System and Resilience Thinking

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    Response Times in Economics: Looking Through the Lens of Sequential Sampling Models

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    The BCD of response time analysis in experimental economics

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