Elliot Ludvig

 

Elliot Ludvigel, Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychology at Warwick University, UK will be visiting us next Thursday and giving a talk in the Social, Economic, and Decision Psychology Colloquium (abstract follows). He earned his Ph.D. from Duke University in Psychological and Brain Sciences and did post-doctoral research in Neuroscience at Princeton University and in Computing Science at the University of Alberta. His research builds and tests computational models of how humans and other animals learn to make decisions

 

Memory biases in risky decisions from experience

When faced with risky choices, people often choose differently pending whether they learn about the odds and outcomes through explicit description or through repeated experience. In the latter case, when deciding based on past experiences, people must rely on their memories to guide choice. These memories, however, need not be veridical. In this talk, I discuss two ways in which memories of past outcomes can be distorted, affecting choice in risky decisions from experiences. First, people tend to remember the most extreme outcomes encountered (both best and worst), making them more risk seeking for gains than losses. Second, subtle reminders of past wins can induce people to gamble more. These biases are not uniquely human, and similar patterns of risky choice have been observed in pigeons and monkeys. I interpret these results through a reinforcement-learning model, derived from studies on animal learning, that learns similarly from both real and replayed experiences.

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