Judgment and Decision Making (Jan 2021)

Attentional shifts and preference reversals: An eye-tracking study

  • Carlos Alós-Ferrer,
  • Alexander Jaudas,
  • Alexander Ritschel

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 57 – 93

Abstract

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The classic preference reversal phenomenon, where monetary evaluations contradict risky choices, has been argued to arise due to a focus on outcomes during the evaluation of alternatives, leading to overpricing of long-shot options. Such an explanation makes the implicit assumption that attentional shifts drive the phenomenon. We conducted an eye-tracking study to causally test this hypothesis by comparing a treatment based on cardinal, monetary evaluations with a different treatment avoiding a monetary frame. We find a significant treatment effect in the form of a shift in attention toward outcomes (relative to probabilities) when evaluations are monetary. Our evidence suggests that attentional shifts resulting from the monetary frame of evaluations are a driver of preference reversals.

Keywords