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The Role of Self-Reported Predecisional Affect in Re-current Decision-Making
Jäger, Daniel (2026): The Role of Self-Reported Predecisional Affect in Re-current Decision-Making, Bamberg: Otto-Friedrich-Universität, doi: 10.20378/irb-112535.
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Year of publication:
2026
Pages:
Supervisor:
Language:
English
Remark:
Kumulative Dissertation, Otto-Friedrich-Universität Bamberg, 2026
Von der genannten Lizenzangabe ausgenommen sind folgende Bestandteile dieser Dissertation:
Study 1 "Expected Valence Predicts Choice in a Recurrent Decision Task" (S. 95-114) und Study 3 "Time matters: On the predictive power of current, short- and long-term expected valence in an experience based learning task" (S. 116-130) stehen unter der CC-Lizenz CC BY.
Lizenzvertrag: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Von der genannten Lizenzangabe ausgenommen sind folgende Bestandteile dieser Dissertation:
Study 1 "Expected Valence Predicts Choice in a Recurrent Decision Task" (S. 95-114) und Study 3 "Time matters: On the predictive power of current, short- and long-term expected valence in an experience based learning task" (S. 116-130) stehen unter der CC-Lizenz CC BY.
Lizenzvertrag: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
DOI:
Abstract:
This thesis explores the role of self-reported affect in recurrent decision-making, with a particular focus on how both current and expected emotions influence choices over time. Three studies were conducted to investigate the impact of current and expected valence on decision-making in various contexts. The first study examined the predictive power of expected affect in a recurrent gambling task, where expected valence was found to be the strongest predictor of choice. The second study expanded on this by exploring the interaction between current and expected affect, revealing that both types of emotions contribute to decision-making depending on task context. The third study emphasized the importance of time horizons, showing that short-term and long-term expectations interact differently based on the nature of the decision, such as point-loss versus point-omission scenarios. These findings suggest that emotional ex-pectations, as well as current emotional states, are essential components in predicting choices and that the subjective affective system adapts to varying contextual demands. The results also highlight the need for a more nuanced approach to measuring affect, integrating both expected and current emotions to better understand decision-making across a range of contexts. This work provides valuable insights into how emotions guide choices in both financial and non-financial domains, offering implications for fu-ture research on emotion-driven decision-making.
GND Keywords: ;
Entscheidungsfindung
Affekt
Keywords: ; ; ; ;
expected valence
predecisional affect
current valence
decision
choice
DDC Classification:
RVK Classification:
Type:
Doctoralthesis
Activation date:
January 19, 2026
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https://fis.uni-bamberg.de/handle/uniba/112535