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Bence Palfi

Researcher at University of Sussex

Publications -  31
Citations -  705

Bence Palfi is an academic researcher from University of Sussex. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dilemma & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 24 publications receiving 423 citations. Previous affiliations of Bence Palfi include Eötvös Loránd University & Imperial College London.

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A Systematic Scoping Review of the Choice Architecture Movement: Toward Understanding When and Why Nudges Work

TL;DR: This paper provided a domain-general scoping review of the nudge movement by reviewing 422 choice architecture interventions in 156 empirical studies and found that 74% of these studies were mainly motivated to assess the effectiveness of the interventions in one specific setting, while only 24% of the studies focused on the exploration of moderators or underlying processes.
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Registered Replication Report : Rand, Greene, and Nowak (2012)

TL;DR: The size and variability of the effect of time pressure on cooperative decisions are assessed by combining 21 separate, preregistered replications of the critical conditions from Study 7 of the original article and the results are consistent with the presence of selection biases and the absence of a causal effect ofTime pressure on cooperation.
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Quantifying Support for the Null Hypothesis in Psychology: An Empirical Investigation:

TL;DR: This article examined empirically the treatment and evidential impact of nonsignificant results in the traditional statistical framework, leaving researchers in a state of suspended disbelief and concluded that nonsignificantly significant results leave researchers in suspended disbelief.
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The cognitive reflection test revisited: exploring the ways individuals solve the test

TL;DR: The authors explored the strategies used and the abilities employed when individuals solve the cognitive reflection test (CRT), and found that the suppression of the first answer may not be the only crucial feature of reflectivity in the CRT and that the lack of...
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A multi-country test of brief reappraisal interventions on emotions during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Ke Wang, +473 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the effectiveness of reappraisal, an emotion-regulation strategy that modifies how one thinks about a situation, was tested to reduce negative emotions and increase positive emotions.