Judgment and Decision Making (Nov 2018)

Moderators of framing effects in variations of the Asian Disease problem: Time constraint, need, and disease type

  • Adele Diederich,
  • Marc Wyszynski,
  • Ilana Ritov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1930297500006574
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13
pp. 529 – 546

Abstract

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This study examined framing effects in decisions concerning public health. Tversky and Kahneman’s famous Asian Disease Problem served as experimental paradigm. Subjects chose between a sure and a risky option either presented as gains (saving lives) or as losses (dying). The amount of risk varied in terms of different probabilities. The number of affected people was either small (low need) or large (high need). Additionally, the decisions were linked to three different types of diseases (unusual infection, AIDS, leukemia). We also implemented two different time constraints during which the subjects had to give a response. Finally, we tested a within-subject design. The data analysis assuming a linear mixed effects model revealed significant effects of framing, probabilities, and need. Furthermore, the type of disease and time constraints were moderating the framing effect. Across the different diseases, framing effects were amplified when decision time was short.

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