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Framing is a motivated process.

George Ainslie1

  • 1Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Coatesville, PA 19320, USA George.Ainslie@va.govwww.picoeconomics.org.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Choice framing is a motivated process that alters decision-making incentives. Categorizing options, even those with high short-term payoffs, can motivate rejection when framed as a test case.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Behavioral Economics
  • Decision Science

Background:

  • Framing effects are known to influence decision-making by altering how choices are perceived.
  • The cognitive processes underlying framing are often considered neutral.
  • The role of motivation in the framing process itself requires further investigation.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate framing as a motivated choice rather than a neutral cognitive process.
  • To understand how categorizing choices modifies incentives.
  • To explore the conditions under which framing motivates the rejection of certain options.

Main Methods:

  • Analysis of choice categorization strategies.
  • Examination of incentive structures influenced by framing.
  • Theoretical modeling of motivated decision-making in response to framed choices.

Main Results:

  • Framing choices into categories actively modifies the incentives associated with them.
  • The act of framing is demonstrated to be a motivated choice.
  • Framing an inferior option with a high short-term payoff within a broad category can incentivize its rejection.

Conclusions:

  • Framing is not merely a neutral cognitive tool but a motivated action.
  • The categorization of choices is a key mechanism through which framing exerts its influence.
  • Motivated rejection of framed choices, particularly when framed as a test case, highlights the active role of the decision-maker.