461 results match your criteria: "Center for Adaptive Rationality[Affiliation]"
Appl Psychol Health Well Being
November 2024
Department of Psychology, University of Konstanz, Konstanz, Germany.
Misrepresentation of peer behavior has often been observed in college students and may lead to over-expression of alcohol consumption and under-expression of studying. While social norm feedback approaches have had mixed success in addressing these misrepresentations and altering behavior, they may have been too unspecific to be effective and did not directly assess individual perception accuracy. We thus investigated how specific, one-time feedback on the behavioral distribution of alcohol consumption or study time of a clearly defined, individually-adjusted social circle would affect the respective norm estimations and behavior of a class of Psychology students (n = 89 in January) across their first year of study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Hum Neurosci
July 2024
Developmental Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Introduction: Individual differences in social learning impact many important decisions, from voting behavior to polarization. Prior research has found that there are consistent and stable individual differences in social information use. However, the underlying mechanisms of these individual differences are still poorly understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSupport Care Cancer
June 2024
Department for Global Health and Rehabilitation, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Bergen, Norway.
Purpose: The number of older people with poor oral health diagnosed with cancer is increasing rapidly. However, integration of oral health in cancer care for older people to prevent or minimize oral health complications of cancer treatments is uncommon, except in head and neck oncology. The aim of this review is to describe the need, role of, and factors influencing the integration of oral health(care) into the treatment of older people with cancer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS Comput Biol
June 2024
Center for Adaptive Rationality, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin, Germany.
Younger and older adults often differ in their risky choices. Theoretical frameworks on human aging point to various cognitive and motivational factors that might underlie these differences. Using a novel computational model based on the framework of resource rationality, we find that the two age groups rely on different strategies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFiScience
June 2024
Cognitive and Computational Neuroscience Laboratory (LNC), INSERM U960, DEC, Ecole Normale Supérieure, PSL University, 75005 Paris, France.
Emotional signals, notably those signaling threat, benefit from prioritized processing in the human brain. Yet, it remains unclear whether perceptual decisions about the emotional, threat-related aspects of stimuli involve specific or similar neural computations compared to decisions about their non-threatening/non-emotional components. We developed a novel behavioral paradigm in which participants performed two different detection tasks (emotion vs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
June 2024
Center for Adaptive Rationality, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin 14195, Germany.
Impulsivity is a personality construct frequently employed to explain and predict important human behaviors. Major inconsistencies in its definition and measurement, however, have led some researchers to call for an outright rejection of impulsivity as a psychological construct. We address this highly unsatisfactory state with a large-scale, preregistered study ( = 1,676) in which each participant completed 48 measures of impulsivity derived from 10 self-report scales and 10 behavioral tasks and reported frequencies of seven impulsivity-related behaviors (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEPJ Data Sci
May 2024
Faculty of Psychology, University of Basel, Missionsstrasse 60-62, Basel, 4055 Switzerland.
Unlabelled: We assess whether the classic psychometric paradigm of risk perception can be improved or supplanted by novel approaches relying on language embeddings. To this end, we introduce the Basel Risk Norms, a large data set covering 1004 distinct sources of risk (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci
August 2024
Faculty of Psychology, Center for Cognitive and Decision Sciences, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
Objectives: Numerous theories exist regarding age differences in risk preference and related constructs, yet many of them offer conflicting predictions and fail to consider convergence between measurement modalities or constructs. To pave the way for conceptual clarification and theoretical refinement, in this preregistered study we aimed to comprehensively examine age effects on risk preference, impulsivity, and self-control using different measurement modalities, and to assess their convergence.
Methods: We collected a large battery of self-report, informant report, behavioral, hormone, and neuroimaging measures from a cross-sectional sample of 148 (55% female) healthy human participants between 16 and 81 years (mean age = 46 years, standard deviation [SD] = 19).
Nat Hum Behav
June 2024
Graduate School of Education, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.
The spread of misinformation through media and social networks threatens many aspects of society, including public health and the state of democracies. One approach to mitigating the effect of misinformation focuses on individual-level interventions, equipping policymakers and the public with essential tools to curb the spread and influence of falsehoods. Here we introduce a toolbox of individual-level interventions for reducing harm from online misinformation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS Comput Biol
May 2024
Institute for Theoretical Biology, Humboldt University Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Collective dynamics emerge from individual-level decisions, yet we still poorly understand the link between individual-level decision-making processes and collective outcomes in realistic physical systems. Using collective foraging to study the key trade-off between personal and social information use, we present a mechanistic, spatially-explicit agent-based model that combines individual-level evidence accumulation of personal and (visual) social cues with particle-based movement. Under idealized conditions without physical constraints, our mechanistic framework reproduces findings from established probabilistic models, but explains how individual-level decision processes generate collective outcomes in a bottom-up way.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychol Health
April 2024
Department of Psychology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
Objective: Pediatric asthma management is challenging for parents and guardians (hereafter ). We examined (1) how caregivers mentally represent trigger and symptom management strategies, and (2) how those mental representations are associated with actual management behavior.
Methods: In an online survey, = 431 caregivers of children with asthma rated 20 trigger management behaviors and 20 symptom management behaviors across 15 characteristics, and indicated how often they engaged in each behavior.
Front Psychol
April 2024
Perception and Cognition Lab, European Neuroscience Institute Göttingen-A Joint Initiative of the University Medical Center Göttingen and the Max Planck Society, Göttingen, Germany.
When comparing themselves with others, people often evaluate their own behaviors more favorably. This egocentric tendency is often categorized as a bias of attribution, with favorable self-evaluation resulting from differing explanations of one's own behavior and that of others. However, studies on information availability in social contexts offer an alternative explanation, ascribing egocentric biases to the inherent informational asymmetries between performing an action and merely observing it.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElife
April 2024
Science of Intelligence Excellence Cluster, Technical University Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
In the unpredictable Anthropocene, a particularly pressing open question is how certain species invade urban environments. Sex-biased dispersal and learning arguably influence movement ecology, but their joint influence remains unexplored empirically, and might vary by space and time. We assayed reinforcement learning in wild-caught, temporarily captive core-, middle-, or edge-range great-tailed grackles-a bird species undergoing urban-tracking rapid range expansion, led by dispersing males.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
March 2024
Department of Comparative Cultural Psychology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany.
Human cognition is incredibly flexible, allowing us to thrive within diverse environments. However, humans also tend to stick to familiar strategies, even when there are better solutions available. How do we exhibit flexibility in some contexts, yet inflexibility in others? The constrained flexibility framework (CFF) proposes that cognitive flexibility is shaped by variability, predictability, and harshness within decision-making environments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
March 2024
Center for Adaptive Rationality, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin, Germany.
Collective dynamics emerge from countless individual decisions. Yet, we poorly understand the processes governing dynamically-interacting individuals in human collectives under realistic conditions. We present a naturalistic immersive-reality experiment where groups of participants searched for rewards in different environments, studying how individuals weigh personal and social information and how this shapes individual and collective outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Soc Psychol
July 2024
New York University, New York City, New York, USA.
False beliefs pose significant societal threats, including health risks, political polarization and even violence. In two studies (N = 884) we explored the efficacy of an individual-based approach to correcting false beliefs. We examined whether the character virtue of intellectual humility (IH)-an appreciation of one's intellectual boundaries-encourages revising one's false beliefs in response to counter-information.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCognition
May 2024
Technical University of Munich, School of Management, Arcisstr. 21, 80333 München, Germany; Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Center for Adaptive Rationality, Lentzeallee 94, 14195 Berlin, Germany. Electronic address:
In their famous study on risk judgments, Lichtenstein, Slovic, Fischhoff, Layman, and Combs (1978) concluded that people tend to overestimate the frequencies of dramatic causes of death (e.g., homicide, tornado) and underestimate the frequencies of nondramatic ones (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Psychol Gen
March 2024
Center for Adaptive Rationality, Max Planck Institute for Human Development.
People routinely make decisions based on samples of numerical values. A common conclusion from the literature in psychophysics and behavioral economics is that observers subjectively compress magnitudes, such that extreme values have less sway over people's decisions than prescribed by a normative model (underweighting). However, recent studies have reported evidence for anti-compression, that is, the relative overweighting of extreme values.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Public Health
January 2024
Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Palo Alto, CA, United States.
Background: Although transparency is crucial for building public trust, public health communication during the COVID-19 pandemic was often nontransparent.
Methods: In a cross-sectional online study with COVID-19 vaccine-hesitant German residents ( = 763), we explored the impact of COVID-19 public health communication on the attitudes of vaccine-hesitant individuals toward vaccines as well as their perceptions of incomprehensible and incomplete information. We also investigated whether specific formats of public health messaging were perceived as more trustworthy.
Behav Brain Sci
January 2024
Center for Adaptive Rationality, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin,
If group norms and decisions foster peace, then understanding how norms and decisions arise becomes important. Here, we suggest that neither norms nor other forms of group-based decision making (such as offering restitution) can be adequately understood without simultaneously considering (i) what individual psychologies are doing and (ii) the dynamics these psychologies produce when interacting with each other.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
January 2024
Center for Adaptive Rationality, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin, Germany.
People's decisions are often informed by the choices of others. Evidence accumulation models provide a mechanistic account of how such social information enters the choice process. Previous research taking this approach has suggested two fundamentally different cognitive mechanisms by which people incorporate social information.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
January 2024
Center for Adaptive Rationality, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin 14195, Germany.
Like biological species, words in language must compete to survive. Previously, it has been shown that language changes in response to cognitive constraints and over time becomes more learnable. Here, we use two complementary research paradigms to demonstrate how the survival of existing word forms can be predicted by psycholinguistic properties that impact language production.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Hum Behav
February 2024
Research Group Adaptive Memory and Decision Making, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin, Germany.
Stimulus-dependent eye movements have been recognized as a potential confound in decoding visual working memory information from neural signals. Here we combined eye-tracking with representational geometry analyses to uncover the information in miniature gaze patterns while participants (n = 41) were cued to maintain visual object orientations. Although participants were discouraged from breaking fixation by means of real-time feedback, small gaze shifts (<1°) robustly encoded the to-be-maintained stimulus orientation, with evidence for encoding two sequentially presented orientations at the same time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNature
January 2024
Department of Sociology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.
Scientific evidence regularly guides policy decisions, with behavioural science increasingly part of this process. In April 2020, an influential paper proposed 19 policy recommendations ('claims') detailing how evidence from behavioural science could contribute to efforts to reduce impacts and end the COVID-19 pandemic. Here we assess 747 pandemic-related research articles that empirically investigated those claims.
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