Dr. Daniel Read
Reader in Operational Research Dept of Operational Research London School of Economics
个人主页http://personal.lse.ac.uk/readd/
We are currently conducting studies into time preference. In these studies, people make choices between outcomes that occur at different points in time -- such as money now versus more money later.
Publications Read, D., & Read, N. L. (2004). Time discounting over the lifespan. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 94, 22-32. Read, D. (2004). Intertemporal choice. In Koehler, D. & Harvey, N. (Eds.) Blackwell Handbook of Judgment and Decision Making. Oxford: Blackwell. Summers, B., McDonald, T. & Read, D. (2004) Does method of acquisition affect the quality of expert judgment? A comparison of education with on-the-job learning. Journal of Organizational and Occupational Psychology, 77, 237-258. Loewenstein, G., Read, D., & Baumeister, R. F. (2003). Time and Decision: Economic and psychological perspectives. New York: Russell Sage Foundation. Read, D. & Roelofsma, P. H. M. P. (2003). Subadditive versus hyperbolic discounting: A comparison of choice and matching. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 91, 140-153. Bown, N., Read, D., & Summers, B. (2003). The lure of choice. Journal of Behavioral Decision Making, 16, 297-308. Read, D., & Powell, M. (2002). Reasons for sequence preferences. Journal of Behavioral Decision Making,15, 433-460. Read, D., & Read, N. L. (2001). An age-embedding effect: Time sensitivity and time insensitivity when pricing health benefits. Acta Psychologica, 108, 117-136. Read, D. (2001). Is time-discounting hyperbolic or subadditive? Journal of Risk and Uncertainty, 23, 5-32. Read, D. (2001). Intrapersonal Dilemmas. Human Relations. 54, 1093-1117. Read, D., Antonides, G., Van den Ouden, L., Trienekens, H. (2001) Which is better: Simultaneous or sequential choice? Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes. Roelofsma, P. H. M. P., & Read, D. (2000). Intransitive intertemporal choice. Journal of Behavioral Decision Making, 13, 161-177. Read, D., Loewenstein, G., & Kalyanaraman, S. (1999). Mixing virtue and vice: Combining the immediacy effect and the diversification heuristic. Journal of Behavioral Decision Making, 12, 257-273. Read, D., Loewenstein, G., & Rabin, M. (1999). Choice bracketing. Journal of Risk and Uncertainty, 19, 171-197. Read, D. & Roelofsma, P. H. M. P. (1999). Hard choices and weak wills: The theory of intrapersonal dilemmas. Philosophical Psychology, 12, 341-356. Read, D. & Loewenstein, G. (1999). Enduring pain for money: Decisions based on the perception and memory of pain. Journal of Behavioral Decision Making, 12, 1-17. Read, D. & van Leeuwen, B. (1998). Predicting hunger: The effects of appetite and delay on choice. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 76, 189-205. Read, D., & Morgan, G. (1998). The efficacy of different methods for informing the public about the range dependency of magnetic fields from high voltage power lines. Risk Analysis, 18, 603-610. Joram, E., & Read, D. (1996). Two faces of representativeness: The effects of response format on beliefs about random sampling. Journal of Behavioral Decision Making, 9, 249-264. Read, D., & Loewenstein, G. (1995). Diversification bias: Explaining the discrepancy in variety seeking between combined and separated choice. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 1, 34-49. Read, D., & Craik, F. I. M. (1995). Earwitness identification: Some influences on voice recognition. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 1, 6-18. Read, D., Bostrom, A., Morgan, M. G., Fischhoff, B., & Smuts, T. (1994). What do people know about global climate change? Part 2: Survey studies of educated laypeople. Risk Analysis, 14, 971-982. Bostrom, A., Morgan, M. G., Fischhoff, B., & Read, D. (1994). What do people know about global climate change? Part 1: Mental models. Risk Analysis, 14, 960-970.