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Broadening the Definition of Decision Making: The Role of Prechoice Screening of Options
272
Citations
18
References
1993
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingChoice TheoryPrechoice ScreeningDecision AnalysisIndividual Decision MakingPolicy AnalysisSocial SciencesPsychologyChoice ModelBiasManagementDecision MakingChoice-process DataDecision TheoryPublic PolicyBehavioral SciencesConsumer Decision MakingCognitive ScienceStrategyDecision-makingImage TheoryDecision NeuroscienceDecision ScienceRisk Decisions
Decision theory and research have focused almost exclusively on choice—the selection of the best option from a choice set containing two or more options. Largely overlooked is the question of how those particular options got there in the first place—why them and not others? This article describes a theory, called image theory, about how prechoice screening of options governs the contents of the set from which a choice is made and summarizes empirical tests of the theory. The research results suggest that screening plays a far more important role in decision making than is generally appreciated and that our view of decision making must be broadened accordingly.
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