Title
Anticipation and Choice Heuristics in the Dynamic Consumption of Pain Relief.
Abstract
Humans frequently need to allocate resources across multiple time-steps. Economic theory proposes that subjects do so according to a stable set of intertemporal preferences, but the computational demands of such decisions encourage the use of formally less competent heuristics. Few empirical studies have examined dynamic resource allocation decisions systematically. Here we conducted an experiment involving the dynamic consumption over approximately 15 minutes of a limited budget of relief from moderately painful stimuli. We had previously elicited the participants' time preferences for the same painful stimuli in one-off choices, allowing us to assess self-consistency. Participants exhibited three characteristic behaviors: saving relief until the end, spreading relief across time, and early spending, of which the last was markedly less prominent. The likelihood that behavior was heuristic rather than normative is suggested by the weak correspondence between one-off and dynamic choices. We show that the consumption choices are consistent with a combination of simple heuristics involving early-spending, spreading or saving of relief until the end, with subjects predominantly exhibiting the last two.
Year
DOI
Venue
2015
10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004030
PLOS COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY
Field
DocType
Volume
Loss aversion,Heuristic,Economic model,Anticipation,Computer science,Cognitive psychology,Operations research,Time preference,Heuristics,Resource allocation,Bioinformatics,Empirical research
Journal
11
Issue
ISSN
Citations 
3
1553-734X
0
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.34
1
6
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Giles W. Story110.96
Ivo Vlaev201.35
Peter Dayan3420191.38
Ben Seymour4669.73
Ara Darzi549658.41
Raymond J Dolan641949.74