Abstract
When communication is not disinterested, seemingly inconsistent preferences are predictable from language pragmatics and information non-equivalence. In addition, the classic risky choice framing effect found in the Asian disease task - risk-aversion with gains and risk-seeking with losses - applies to gambles, but tends to be overgeneralized to non-gambling situations.
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CITATION STYLE
APA
Kühberger, A. (2022). Why framing effects can be rational. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 45. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X22001133
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