Renato Frey

187 Followers
94 Following
44 Posts
Professor of psychology @ University of Zurich, #CBDR_lab. Data science. R. Python. Decision making. Cognition. Behavior. Risk and uncertainty. Meta science.
Webhttps://renatofrey.net
Webhttps://cbdr-lab.net
Which risky choices should (and do) we study as behavioral scientists? In two related articles, we recently examined the current "ecology of risk" (i.e., laypersons' reports on what risky choices they face in real life) and how these choices differ from those typically studied in the lab. See https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/09567976251384975 and https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2027-13320-001 With @oliviafischer and @aaronlob #risk #decisions #cbdr_lab
These days, everyone is talking about #polarization. But how best to measure it? Olivia Fischer and I have a new paper that empirically compares various operationalizations of polarization (e.g., on people's risk perceptions), including a shiny app to simulate and analyze different kinds of polarization. https://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bdm.70041 #CBDR_lab @oliviafischer
Congratulations to MauΓ© Pantoja (https://cbdr-lab.net/pantoja/) for the 2nd place of the student poster award (Society for Judgment & Decision Making #SJDM / New York) πŸš€πŸš€ πŸš€ #CBDR_lab
Congratulations to @oliviafischer and @aaronlob who won the 1st an 2nd prizes at our institute's local student conference yesterday 🍾 πŸ’ͺ πŸ˜€ #CBDR_lab
Do you already know the #CBDR_lab color palette for R? Particularly well-suited for barplots up to four bars.
#CBDR_lab goes to a (rainy) x-mas dinner!! Happy holidays everyone ❄️ πŸŽ„ 🍾 ⭐
Congratulations @oliviafischer to the 2nd place of the best student poster award (Society for Judgment & Decision Making #SJDM / San Francisco) #CBDR_lab
@oliviafischer in full presentation mode at #SPUDM conference, presenting her work on modeling the polarization of people's risk perceptions. #CBDR_lab
New year, new #paper: Do people have highly unique configurations of multidimensional #risk #preferences, or do they share basic risk profiles? For the answer see our latest article in the Journal of Risk and Uncertainty with @elkeweber & @ShannonMDuncan https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11166-022-09398-5
Towards a typology of risk preference: Four risk profiles describe two-thirds of individuals in a large sample of the U.S. population - Journal of Risk and Uncertainty

It has been a longstanding goal of the behavioral sciences to measure and model people’s risk preferences. In this article, we adopt a novel theoretical perspective of doing so and test to what extent specific types of individuals share similar risk profiles (i.e., configurations of multidimensional risk preferences). To this end, we analyzed data of a U.S. sample (N = 3,123) in a comprehensive and rigorous way, resulting in a twofold contribution. First, based on data from the Domain-Specific Risk-Taking scale (DOSPERT) and using a cross-validation procedure, we established a multidimensional trait space including general and domain-specific dimensions of risk preference. Second, we employed model-based cluster analyses in this multidimensional trait space, finding that 66% of participants can be described well with four basic risk profiles. In sum, the typological perspective proposed in this article has important implications for current theories of risk preference and the measurement of individual differences therein.

SpringerLink
RT @CBDR_lab
This week Sudeep Bhatia @sdpbht is visiting our lab, exciting and fun discussions on NLP and risky choice! With @moliviafischer and @renatofrey_sci