R
Rose Martin
Researcher at University of Surrey
Publications - 7
Citations - 133
Rose Martin is an academic researcher from University of Surrey. The author has contributed to research in topics: Veil of ignorance & Social dilemma. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 7 publications receiving 85 citations. Previous affiliations of Rose Martin include University of Huddersfield & Kingston University.
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Understanding Risky Behavior: The Influence of Cognitive, Emotional and Hormonal Factors on Decision-Making under Risk
Petko Kusev,Harry R.M. Purser,Renata M. Heilman,Alex Cooke,Paul van Schaik,Victoria Baranova,Rose Martin,Peter Ayton +7 more
TL;DR: The goal of this review article is to address the complexity of individual risky behavior and its underlying psychological factors, as well as to critically examine current regulations on financial behavior.
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Commentary: The Social Dilemma of Autonomous Vehicles
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Preference reversals during risk elicitation.
TL;DR: The results revealed that the effect of probability range (low and high) on preferences, predicted by prospect theory, is an artifact of the logarithmically spaced sure options.
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Autonomous vehicles: How perspective-taking accessibility alters moral judgments and consumer purchasing behavior.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed and tested a novel theoretical proposal called Perspective-Taking Accessibility (PT accessibility), which provided participants with access to both situational perspectives (AV buyers can be passengers or pedestrians) in crash scenarios, eliminated the behavioral inconsistency between their utilitarian judgments of moral appropriateness and non-utilitarian purchasing behavior.
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Moral Decision Making: From Bentham to Veil of Ignorance via Perspective Taking Accessibility
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the theoretical and methodological development of utilitarian theories of moral decision-making and proposed Perspective-Taking Accessibility (PT accessibility), a new type of veil of ignorance with even odds that do not trigger self-interest, risk related preferences or decision biases.