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Eye Movements in Strategic Choice
Authors:Neil Stewart  Simon Gächter  Takao Noguchi  Timothy L Mullett
Institution:1. University of Warwick, Coventry, UK;2. University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK;3. University College London, London, UK
Abstract:In risky and other multiattribute choices, the process of choosing is well described by random walk or drift diffusion models in which evidence is accumulated over time to threshold. In strategic choices, level‐k and cognitive hierarchy models have been offered as accounts of the choice process, in which people simulate the choice processes of their opponents or partners. We recorded the eye movements in 2 × 2 symmetric games including dominance‐solvable games like prisoner's dilemma and asymmetric coordination games like stag hunt and hawk–dove. The evidence was most consistent with the accumulation of payoff differences over time: we found longer duration choices with more fixations when payoffs differences were more finely balanced, an emerging bias to gaze more at the payoffs for the action ultimately chosen, and that a simple count of transitions between payoffs—whether or not the comparison is strategically informative—was strongly associated with the final choice. The accumulator models do account for these strategic choice process measures, but the level‐k and cognitive hierarchy models do not. © 2015 The Authors. Journal of Behavioral Decision Making published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Keywords:eye tracking  process tracing  experimental games  normal‐form games  prisoner's dilemma  stag hunt  hawk–  dove  level‐k  cognitive hierarchy  drift diffusion  accumulator models  gaze cascade effect  gaze bias effect
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