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Colloquium credits

Presentation Masterthesis - Jeroen van der Meer - Psychological Methods

Colloquium credits

Presentation Masterthesis - Jeroen van der Meer - Psychological Methods

Last modified on 21-02-2025 08:38
What Causes the Description-Experience Gap? Analysis Using the Drift-Diffusion Model
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Start date
05-03-2025 14:00
End date
05-03-2025 15:00
Location

REC GS.08

When faced with a risky decision, people make different decisions depending on whether they rely on their personal experience or upon described information. In the study of risky decision-making, this has been the called description-experience gap. While this phenomenon has been well-established, there is still ongoing academic debate about the underlying causes of the effect. Using the drift-diffusion model, we investigate how the components of decision making change when participants receive feedback about the outcomes to their choices. Our findings show that the description-experience gap is associated with significant shifts in drift rate and boundary separation, suggesting that individuals adjust their evaluation methods and response caution after experiencing outcomes. Notably, we found no evidence that shifts in starting point contribute to the description-experience gap, indicating that pre-evaluative biases do not play a role.

Additionally, our analysis introduces three subcategories to the description-experience gap that distinguish between how existing preferences change. Our results suggest that different dynamics might be at play depending on whether an existing preference increases or weakens. We find that in decision problems where an existing preference intensifies, the drift rate is, in about half of the cases, the sole parameter facilitating the description-experience gap. In contrast, in decision problems where an existing preference weakens, boundary separation is, also in about half of the cases, the only parameter causing the gap.