Introducing upfront money can decrease discounting in intertemporal choices with losses

People generally tend to advance gains and postpone losses in intertemporal choice. Jiang, Hu, and Zhu (2014) recently showed that adding upfront losses or gains to both smaller and sooner (SS) and larger and later (LL) rewards can decrease people’s discounting. To account for this decrease, they pr...

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Main Authors: Cheng-Ming Jiang, Hong-Yue Sun, Sheng-Hua Zheng, Liang-Jun Wang, Yu Qin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01256/full
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spelling doaj-137529a5ca054489b54be8536857c7522020-11-24T21:35:52ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782016-08-01710.3389/fpsyg.2016.01256208919Introducing upfront money can decrease discounting in intertemporal choices with lossesCheng-Ming Jiang0Hong-Yue Sun1Sheng-Hua Zheng2Liang-Jun Wang3Yu Qin4Zhejiang University of TechnologyShanghai Normal UniversityZhejiang University of TechnologyZhejiang University of TechnologyZhejiang University of TechnologyPeople generally tend to advance gains and postpone losses in intertemporal choice. Jiang, Hu, and Zhu (2014) recently showed that adding upfront losses or gains to both smaller and sooner (SS) and larger and later (LL) rewards can decrease people’s discounting. To account for this decrease, they proposed the salience hypothesis, which states that introducing upfront losses or gains makes the money dimension more salient than not, thus increasing people’s preference for LL rewards. Considering that decreasing the discounting of delayed losses is imperative and that most previous studies have focused on intertemporal choices with gains, in the current paper we conducted two experiments and used hypothetical money outcomes to examine whether the effect of upfront money could be extended to intertemporal choices with losses. The results showed that when both SS and LL intertemporal losses were combined with an upfront loss or gain, people’s discounting rate decreased and the preference for the SS option increased. This finding further supports the salience account.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01256/fullDiscounting rateSalience accountintertemporal choice with lossesintertemporal choice with gainsupfront money effect
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cheng-Ming Jiang
Hong-Yue Sun
Sheng-Hua Zheng
Liang-Jun Wang
Yu Qin
spellingShingle Cheng-Ming Jiang
Hong-Yue Sun
Sheng-Hua Zheng
Liang-Jun Wang
Yu Qin
Introducing upfront money can decrease discounting in intertemporal choices with losses
Frontiers in Psychology
Discounting rate
Salience account
intertemporal choice with losses
intertemporal choice with gains
upfront money effect
author_facet Cheng-Ming Jiang
Hong-Yue Sun
Sheng-Hua Zheng
Liang-Jun Wang
Yu Qin
author_sort Cheng-Ming Jiang
title Introducing upfront money can decrease discounting in intertemporal choices with losses
title_short Introducing upfront money can decrease discounting in intertemporal choices with losses
title_full Introducing upfront money can decrease discounting in intertemporal choices with losses
title_fullStr Introducing upfront money can decrease discounting in intertemporal choices with losses
title_full_unstemmed Introducing upfront money can decrease discounting in intertemporal choices with losses
title_sort introducing upfront money can decrease discounting in intertemporal choices with losses
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2016-08-01
description People generally tend to advance gains and postpone losses in intertemporal choice. Jiang, Hu, and Zhu (2014) recently showed that adding upfront losses or gains to both smaller and sooner (SS) and larger and later (LL) rewards can decrease people’s discounting. To account for this decrease, they proposed the salience hypothesis, which states that introducing upfront losses or gains makes the money dimension more salient than not, thus increasing people’s preference for LL rewards. Considering that decreasing the discounting of delayed losses is imperative and that most previous studies have focused on intertemporal choices with gains, in the current paper we conducted two experiments and used hypothetical money outcomes to examine whether the effect of upfront money could be extended to intertemporal choices with losses. The results showed that when both SS and LL intertemporal losses were combined with an upfront loss or gain, people’s discounting rate decreased and the preference for the SS option increased. This finding further supports the salience account.
topic Discounting rate
Salience account
intertemporal choice with losses
intertemporal choice with gains
upfront money effect
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01256/full
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AT liangjunwang introducingupfrontmoneycandecreasediscountinginintertemporalchoiceswithlosses
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