A new behavioral and computational study published in PLOS Biology demonstrates that social preferences can be inferred solely from decision speed. The research, led by Sophie Bavard at the University of Hamburg, Germany, utilized the Dictator Game to show that knowing the decision time allows people to predict social preferences without knowing the actual choices. This study was conducted in collaboration with the General Psychology Lab and involved researchers Erik Stuchly, Sebastian Gluth, and Arkady Konovalov.
🚨 New paper out! 🚨 Our latest paper with @SebastianGluth, @ErikStuchly and @arkadykonovalov, where we empirically show that people can learn others' social preference from observing their response time ALONE ⏱️ is finally published in @PLOSBiology! 🧵👇 https://t.co/JixrlqxFaH https://t.co/pOIajPHn9z
We can learn other people's preferences by observing & analyzing their choices. @sophiebavard @SebastianGluth &co show that simply observing someone else’s response time in a choice paradigm is sufficient to infer their preferences #PLOSBiology https://t.co/eklg06GY6S https://t.co/NG4BbstHyj
Behavioral and computational study shows that social preferences can be inferred from decision speed alone Researchers led by Sophie Bavard at the University of Hamburg, Germany, found that people can infer hidden social preferences by observing how fast others make social… https://t.co/18IHUEQ04g
🚨 New paper! Happy to share a new paper in @PLOSBiology in collaboration with @GenPsychLab (spearheaded by @sophiebavard!): "Humans can infer social preferences from decision speed alone". The title says it all, but check out the paper for models: https://t.co/KKFic9jhfs https://t.co/s7awbkGAvG
Humans can infer social preferences from decision speed alone https://t.co/GY03Pou7LA
Decision Speed Reveals Hidden Social Preferences A new study found that decision speed can reveal hidden social preferences. The study used the Dictator Game to demonstrate that knowing the decision time, even without knowing the actual choices, allows people to predict… https://t.co/bMXK1osJdq
Behavioral and computational study shows that #socialPreferences can be inferred from decision speed alone @plos @PLOSBiology https://t.co/PrLrpxKDcY