Scaling Incentives: Determining Preference and Indifference in 8- to lO-Year-Old Girls |
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Authors: | Dennis J. Burns Al Borrego |
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Affiliation: | Management Development and Research Laboratory , University of Alaska , Juneau |
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Abstract: | The present study adopted procedures similar to those used by Logan (1965) to determine choice behavior in children. The objective was to provide an improved methodology in delay-of-gratification studies, thus avoiding the problems associated with scaling different kinds of rewards, and to provide approximate functions relating a delay-of-token reward to choice behavior. Thus, 7 girls aged 8 to 10 years were exposed to a choice paradigm in which a larger reward (2 tokens) was pitted against a smaller reward (1 token); access to these rewards was delayed a certain period of time. The results of this experiment showed that as the delay of the larger reward increased, preference for the smaller reward increased in an orderly fashion. The finding that delay shifted preference from the larger to the smaller reward is discussed in relation to current theory. The results of this experiment also provide evidence for the utility of tokens in scaling incentives for choice studies. |
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Keywords: | college students HIV/AIDS HIV knowledge HIV perceptions HIV testing sexual practices |
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