Applications and innovations of eye-movement research in judgment and decision making
Nathaniel J.S. Ashby, Joseph G. Johnson, Ian Krajbich, Michel Wedel
págs. 96-102
Areas of interest as a signal detection problem in behavioral eye-tracking research
Jacob L. Orquin, Nathaniel J.S. Ashby, Alasdair D.F. Clarke
págs. 103-115
págs. 116-136
Eye movements in strategic choice
Neil Stewart, Simon Gächter, Takao Noguchi, Timothy L. Mullett
págs. 137-156
págs. 157-168
A scanpath analysis of the risky decision-making process
Lei Zhou, Yang-Yang Zhang, Zuo-Jun Wang, Li-Lin Rao, Wei Wang, Shu Lin, Xingshan Li, Zhu-Yuan Liang
págs. 169-182
Eyes on the prize?: evidence of diminishing attention to experienced and foregone outcomes in repeated experiential choice
Nathaniel J.S. Ashby, Tim Rakow
págs. 183-193
Different attentional patterns for regret and disappointment: : An eye-tracking study
Nadège Bault, Pierre Wydoodt, Giorgio Coricelli
págs. 194-205
Now or later? Attentional processing and intertemporal choice
Ana M. Franco-Watkins, Richard E. Mattson, Marc D. Jackson
págs. 206-217
How information availability interacts with visual attention during judgment and decision tasks
Philip Pärnamets, Roger Johansson, Kerstin Gidlöf, Annika Wallin
págs. 218-231
Tracing attitude expressions: : An eye-tracking study
Roxanne I. van Giesen, Arnout R. H. Fischer, Heleen van Dijk, Hans C.M. van Trijp
págs. 232-244
Rebecca A. Ferrer, Jennifer Tehan Stanley, Kaitlin Graff, William M. P. Klein, Nina Goodman, Wendy L. Nelson, Silvia Salazar
págs. 245-253
Nodule detection with eye movements
Michel Wedel, Jin Yan, Eliot L. Siegel, Hongshuang (Alice) Li
págs. 254-270
How people with low and high graph literacy process health graphs: : Evidence from eye-tracking
Yasmina Okan Gil, Mirta Galesic, Rocio Garcia-Retamero
págs. 271-294
Sensitivity to affective information and investors' evaluation of past performance: : An eye-tracking study
Enrico Rubaltelli, Sergio Agnoli, Laura Franchin
págs. 295-306
Eye see what you are saying: : Testing conversational influences on the information gleaned from home-loan disclosure forms
Mark A. LeBoeuf, Jessica M. Choplin, Debra Pogrund Stark
págs. 307-321
“I can see it in your eyes”: : Biased Processing and Increased Arousal in Dishonest Responses
Guy Hochman, Andreas Glöckner, Susann Fiedler, Shahar Ayal
págs. 322-335
Odor semantics and visual cues: : What we smell impacts where we look, what we remember, and what we want to buy
May O. Lwin, Maureen Morrin, Chiao Sing Trinetta Chong, Su Xin Goh
págs. 336-350