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Cited by 16 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…If either criterion were met in the delay discounting data, it was removed from analyses. Additional data were removed that displayed an inverse discounting function, which suggests confusion with the task (see Rung, Argyle, Siri, & Madden, 2018, for further discussion).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If either criterion were met in the delay discounting data, it was removed from analyses. Additional data were removed that displayed an inverse discounting function, which suggests confusion with the task (see Rung, Argyle, Siri, & Madden, 2018, for further discussion).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Specifically, we excluded data from a participant if more than one of their indifference points (beginning with the second) increased by 20% (or more) of the larger amount (e.g., $1000), within either the standard or variable‐delay or double‐reward tasks. This criterion accommodates a participant who may have inadvertently selected the wrong alternative on one trial or who justifiably values money at a single future delay greater than at an earlier delay (e.g., “I plan on moving in about 5 years, so I will wait to receive $5000;” see Rung, Argyle, Siri, & Madden, ). Depending on the condition, between zero and four participants were excluded across the three experiments (see below for more).…”
Section: General Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is evidence that steep delay discounting is associated with different problems that have high social impact at the levels of substance abuse and behavioural addictions (MacKillop et al, 2011), obesity (Davis et al, 2010) and other healthy prevention behaviours (Daugherty and Brase, 2010). This type of evidence indicates a reliable relationship between steep delay discounting and a set of behaviours that result in adverse effects on health in the long term, thus becoming a process that occurs transversally to these problematic behaviour patterns (Rung et al, 2018). However, another behavioural trend, known as preference reversal, occurs along with temporal discounting.…”
Section: The Behavioural Economics Approach To the Study Of Excessivementioning
confidence: 99%