A canonical theory of dynamic decision-making

Decision-making behaviour is studied in many very different fields, from medicine and economics to psychology and neuroscience, with major contributions from mathematics and statistics, computer science, AI and other technical disciplines. However the conceptualisation of what decision-making is and...

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Main Authors: John eFox, Richard P Cooper, David W Glasspool
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2013-04-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00150/full
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spelling doaj-0a278754382f4b55b5d69f8b18e87bd02020-11-24T22:31:52ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782013-04-01410.3389/fpsyg.2013.0015031435A canonical theory of dynamic decision-makingJohn eFox0Richard P Cooper1David W Glasspool2Oxford UniversityBirbeck CollegeDeontics ResearchDecision-making behaviour is studied in many very different fields, from medicine and economics to psychology and neuroscience, with major contributions from mathematics and statistics, computer science, AI and other technical disciplines. However the conceptualisation of what decision-making is and methods for studying it vary greatly and this has resulted in fragmentation of the field. A theory that can accommodate various perspectives may facilitate interdisciplinary working. We present such a theory in which decision-making is articulated as a set of canonical functions that are sufficiently general to accommodate diverse viewpoints, yet sufficiently precise that they can be instantiated in different ways for specific theoretical or practical purposes. The canons cover the whole decision cycle, from the framing of a decision based on the goals, beliefs, and background knowledge of the decision maker to the formulation of decision options, establishing preferences over them, and making commitments. Commitments can lead to the initiation of new decisions and any step in the cycle can incorporate reasoning about previous decisions and the rationales for them, and lead to revising or abandoning existing commitments. The theory situates decision making with respect to other high-level cognitive capabilities like problem-solving, planning and collaborative decision-making. The canonical approach is assessed in three domains: cognitive and neuro-psychology, artificial intelligence, and decision engineering.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00150/fullDecision MakingCognitive Systemscogitive systemsautonomous agentsclinical decision makingunified theories of cognition
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John eFox
Richard P Cooper
David W Glasspool
spellingShingle John eFox
Richard P Cooper
David W Glasspool
A canonical theory of dynamic decision-making
Frontiers in Psychology
Decision Making
Cognitive Systems
cogitive systems
autonomous agents
clinical decision making
unified theories of cognition
author_facet John eFox
Richard P Cooper
David W Glasspool
author_sort John eFox
title A canonical theory of dynamic decision-making
title_short A canonical theory of dynamic decision-making
title_full A canonical theory of dynamic decision-making
title_fullStr A canonical theory of dynamic decision-making
title_full_unstemmed A canonical theory of dynamic decision-making
title_sort canonical theory of dynamic decision-making
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2013-04-01
description Decision-making behaviour is studied in many very different fields, from medicine and economics to psychology and neuroscience, with major contributions from mathematics and statistics, computer science, AI and other technical disciplines. However the conceptualisation of what decision-making is and methods for studying it vary greatly and this has resulted in fragmentation of the field. A theory that can accommodate various perspectives may facilitate interdisciplinary working. We present such a theory in which decision-making is articulated as a set of canonical functions that are sufficiently general to accommodate diverse viewpoints, yet sufficiently precise that they can be instantiated in different ways for specific theoretical or practical purposes. The canons cover the whole decision cycle, from the framing of a decision based on the goals, beliefs, and background knowledge of the decision maker to the formulation of decision options, establishing preferences over them, and making commitments. Commitments can lead to the initiation of new decisions and any step in the cycle can incorporate reasoning about previous decisions and the rationales for them, and lead to revising or abandoning existing commitments. The theory situates decision making with respect to other high-level cognitive capabilities like problem-solving, planning and collaborative decision-making. The canonical approach is assessed in three domains: cognitive and neuro-psychology, artificial intelligence, and decision engineering.
topic Decision Making
Cognitive Systems
cogitive systems
autonomous agents
clinical decision making
unified theories of cognition
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00150/full
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