Book contents
- Sampling in Judgment and Decision Making
- Sampling in Judgment and Decision Making
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Part I Historical Review of Sampling Perspectives and Major Paradigms
- Part II Sampling Mechanisms
- Part III Consequences of Selective Sampling
- Part IV Truncation and Stopping Rules
- Chapter 13 Sequential Decisions from Sampling:
- Chapter 14 Thurstonian Uncertainty in Self-Determined Judgment and Decision Making
- Chapter 15 The Information Cost–Benefit Trade-Off as a Sampling Problem in Information Search
- Part V Sampling as a Tool in Social Environments
- Part VI Computational Approaches
- Index
- References
Chapter 13 - Sequential Decisions from Sampling:
Inductive Generation of Stopping Decisions Using Instance-Based Learning Theory
from Part IV - Truncation and Stopping Rules
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 June 2023
- Sampling in Judgment and Decision Making
- Sampling in Judgment and Decision Making
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Part I Historical Review of Sampling Perspectives and Major Paradigms
- Part II Sampling Mechanisms
- Part III Consequences of Selective Sampling
- Part IV Truncation and Stopping Rules
- Chapter 13 Sequential Decisions from Sampling:
- Chapter 14 Thurstonian Uncertainty in Self-Determined Judgment and Decision Making
- Chapter 15 The Information Cost–Benefit Trade-Off as a Sampling Problem in Information Search
- Part V Sampling as a Tool in Social Environments
- Part VI Computational Approaches
- Index
- References
Summary
Sequential decisions from sampling are common in daily life: we often explore alternatives sequentially, decide when to stop such exploration process, and use the experience acquired during sampling to make a choice for what is expected to be the best option. In decisions from experience, theories of sampling and experiential choice are unable to explain the decision of when to stop the sequential exploration of alternatives. In this chapter, we propose a mechanism to inductively generate stopping decisions, and we demonstrate its plausibility in a large and diverse human data set of the binary choice sampling paradigm. Our proposed stopping mechanism relies on the choice process of a theory of experiential choice, Instance-Based Learning Theory (IBLT). The new stopping mechanism tracks the relative prediction errors of the two options during sampling, and stops when such difference is close to zero. Our results from simulation are able to accurately predict human stopping decisions distributions in the dataset. This model provides an integrated theoretical account of decisions from experience, where the stopping decisions are generated inductively from the sampling process.
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- Sampling in Judgment and Decision Making , pp. 289 - 310Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023