Clintin P. Davis-Stober , A.A.J. Marley , William J. McCausland , Brandon M. Turner
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Three context effects pertaining to stochastic discrete choice have attracted a lot of attention in Psychology, Economics and Marketing: the similarity effect, the compromise effect and the asymmetric dominance effect. Despite this attention, the existing literature is rife with conflicting definitions and misconceptions. We provide theorems relating different variants of each of the three context effects, and theorems relating the context effects to conditions on discrete choice probabilities, such as random utility, regularity, the constant ratio rule, and simple scalability, that may or may not hold for any given discrete choice model. We show how context effects at the individual level may or may not aggregate to context effects at the population level. Importantly, we offer this work as a guide for researchers to sharpen empirical tests and aid future development of choice models.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Mathematical Psychology includes articles, monographs and reviews, notes and commentaries, and book reviews in all areas of mathematical psychology. Empirical and theoretical contributions are equally welcome.
Areas of special interest include, but are not limited to, fundamental measurement and psychological process models, such as those based upon neural network or information processing concepts. A partial listing of substantive areas covered include sensation and perception, psychophysics, learning and memory, problem solving, judgment and decision-making, and motivation.
The Journal of Mathematical Psychology is affiliated with the Society for Mathematical Psychology.
Research Areas include:
• Models for sensation and perception, learning, memory and thinking
• Fundamental measurement and scaling
• Decision making
• Neural modeling and networks
• Psychophysics and signal detection
• Neuropsychological theories
• Psycholinguistics
• Motivational dynamics
• Animal behavior
• Psychometric theory