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Cognitive control and the path to better economic decision making

Published on Sep 07, 20151484 Views

It is often—at least implicitly—assumed that better cognitive control should lead to more rational and therefore better decision making, an assumption which influences strategies for management contro

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Chapter list

Neuroeconomics00:00
Thinking fast and thinking slow - 100:15
The principles of psychology01:25
Controlled and automatic human information processing02:05
Thinking fast and thinking slow - 203:03
Management control04:00
Assumption04:22
Conditions - tasks05:17
Vigilance - 108:15
Vigilance - 208:40
Flanker task - 109:23
Flanker task - 210:23
Flanker task - 310:46
Emotional capture - 111:42
Emotional capture - 212:26
Do incentives improve cognitive control - 113:19
Do incentives improve cognitive control - 213:43
Do incentives improve cognitive control - 314:29
Do incentives improve cognitive control - 417:02
Mechanism underlying primary and secondary reward18:00
Self-control is “expensive”19:23
Zero frame - 120:50
Zero frame - 223:17
Zero frame - 325:05
Zero frame - 425:49
Self-control vs. reframing26:34
Question26:51
Cognitive control27:43
Thinking fast and thinking slow - 328:18
Thinking fast and thinking slow - 428:54
Thinking fast and thinking slow - 529:07
Acknowledgments29:23