Peripheral Visual Information Halves Attentional Choice Biases
Abstract
A growing body of research has shown that simple choices involve the construction and comparison of values at the time of decision. These processes are modulated by attention in a way that leaves decision makers susceptible to attentional biases. Here, we studied the role of peripheral visual information on the choice process and on attentional choice biases. We used an eye-tracking experiment in which participants (N = 50 adults) made binary choices between food items that were displayed in marked screen "shelves" in two conditions: (a) where both items were displayed, and (b) where items were displayed only when participants fixated within their shelves. We found that removing the nonfixated option approximately doubled the size of the attentional biases. The results show that peripheral visual information is crucial in facilitating good decisions and suggest that individuals might be influenceable by settings in which only one item is shown at a time, such as e-commerce.
Copyright and License
© The Author(s) 2023.
Data Availability
All data and code are available for download at the Rangel Neuroeconomics Lab website (www.rnl.caltech.edu). The design and analysis plans for this study were not preregistered.
Contributions
Brenden Eum: Formal analysis; Methodology; Project administration; Validation; Visualization; Writing – original draft; Writing – review & editing.
Stephanie Dolbier: Data curation; Investigation; Project administration.
Antonio Rangel: Conceptualization; Funding acquisition; Methodology; Project administration; Resources; Supervision; Writing – original draft; Writing – review & editing.
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Additional details
- ISSN
- 1467-9280
- Nomis Foundation