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The intrinsic value of choice: The propensity to under-delegate in the face of potential gains and losses
Authors:Sebastian Bobadilla-Suarez  Cass R Sunstein  Tali Sharot
Institution:1.Affective Brain Lab, Department of Experimental Psychology,University College London,London,UK;2.The Alan Turing Institute,London,UK;3.Harvard Law School,Harvard University,Cambridge,USA
Abstract:Human beings are often faced with a pervasive problem: whether to make their own decision or to delegate the decision task to someone else. Here, we test whether people are inclined to forgo monetary rewards in order to retain agency when faced with choices that could lead to losses and gains. In a simple choice task, we show that participants choose to pay in order to control their own payoff more than they should if they were to maximize monetary rewards and minimize monetary losses. This tendency cannot be explained by participants’ overconfidence in their own ability, as their perceived ability was elicited and accounted for. Nor can the results be explained by lack of information. Rather, the results seem to reflect an intrinsic value for choice, which emerges in the domain of both gains and of losses. Moreover, our data indicate that participants are aware that they are making suboptimal choices in the normative sense, but do so anyway, presumably for psychological gains.
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