The effect of temporal distance on attitudes toward imprecise probabilities and imprecise outcomes

Many personal, managerial, and societal decisions involve uncertain or ambiguous consequences that will occur in the future. Yet, previous empirical research on ambiguity preferences has focused mainly on decisions with immediate outcomes. To close this gap in the literature, this paper examines amb...

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Main Authors: Selcuk Onay, Dolchai La-ornual, Ayse Öncüler
Other Authors: University of Waterloo
Format: Article
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/31125
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spelling th-mahidol.311252020-08-31T11:14:48Z The effect of temporal distance on attitudes toward imprecise probabilities and imprecise outcomes Selcuk Onay Dolchai La-ornual Ayse Öncüler University of Waterloo Mahidol University ESSEC Business School Arts and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Decision Sciences Psychology Social Sciences Many personal, managerial, and societal decisions involve uncertain or ambiguous consequences that will occur in the future. Yet, previous empirical research on ambiguity preferences has focused mainly on decisions with immediate outcomes. To close this gap in the literature, this paper examines ambiguity attitudes toward future prospects, particularly how they may differ from the attitudes toward comparable prospects in the present. On the basis of a recent paradigm, we first distinguish between two types of ambiguity: imprecise probabilities and imprecise outcomes. Then, in accordance with construal level theory, which shows that temporal distance increases the relative importance of outcomes over probabilities in evaluating prospects, we conjecture that temporal distance would moderate attitudes toward imprecise probabilities but amplify attitudes toward imprecise outcomes. Through a series of experiments, we demonstrate that when the prospects are in the future, individuals are less averse toward imprecise probabilities and more seeking toward imprecise outcomes. However, the effect is most prominent for prospects where both the probability and outcome dimensions are concurrently imprecise. The paper ends with a discussion on how dimension salience may have contributed to this result. Copyright © 2012. 2018-10-19T04:33:24Z 2018-10-19T04:33:24Z 2013-10-01 Article Journal of Behavioral Decision Making. Vol.26, No.4 (2013), 362-374 10.1002/bdm.1763 10990771 08943257 2-s2.0-84884175399 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/31125 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84884175399&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Arts and Humanities
Business, Management and Accounting
Decision Sciences
Psychology
Social Sciences
spellingShingle Arts and Humanities
Business, Management and Accounting
Decision Sciences
Psychology
Social Sciences
Selcuk Onay
Dolchai La-ornual
Ayse Öncüler
The effect of temporal distance on attitudes toward imprecise probabilities and imprecise outcomes
description Many personal, managerial, and societal decisions involve uncertain or ambiguous consequences that will occur in the future. Yet, previous empirical research on ambiguity preferences has focused mainly on decisions with immediate outcomes. To close this gap in the literature, this paper examines ambiguity attitudes toward future prospects, particularly how they may differ from the attitudes toward comparable prospects in the present. On the basis of a recent paradigm, we first distinguish between two types of ambiguity: imprecise probabilities and imprecise outcomes. Then, in accordance with construal level theory, which shows that temporal distance increases the relative importance of outcomes over probabilities in evaluating prospects, we conjecture that temporal distance would moderate attitudes toward imprecise probabilities but amplify attitudes toward imprecise outcomes. Through a series of experiments, we demonstrate that when the prospects are in the future, individuals are less averse toward imprecise probabilities and more seeking toward imprecise outcomes. However, the effect is most prominent for prospects where both the probability and outcome dimensions are concurrently imprecise. The paper ends with a discussion on how dimension salience may have contributed to this result. Copyright © 2012.
author2 University of Waterloo
author_facet University of Waterloo
Selcuk Onay
Dolchai La-ornual
Ayse Öncüler
format Article
author Selcuk Onay
Dolchai La-ornual
Ayse Öncüler
author_sort Selcuk Onay
title The effect of temporal distance on attitudes toward imprecise probabilities and imprecise outcomes
title_short The effect of temporal distance on attitudes toward imprecise probabilities and imprecise outcomes
title_full The effect of temporal distance on attitudes toward imprecise probabilities and imprecise outcomes
title_fullStr The effect of temporal distance on attitudes toward imprecise probabilities and imprecise outcomes
title_full_unstemmed The effect of temporal distance on attitudes toward imprecise probabilities and imprecise outcomes
title_sort effect of temporal distance on attitudes toward imprecise probabilities and imprecise outcomes
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/31125
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