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Yaniv Hanoch

Researcher at University of Southampton

Publications -  135
Citations -  3780

Yaniv Hanoch is an academic researcher from University of Southampton. The author has contributed to research in topics: Risk perception & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 127 publications receiving 3247 citations. Previous affiliations of Yaniv Hanoch include Virginia Commonwealth University & University of Plymouth.

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Domain Specificity in Experimental Measures and Participant Recruitment An Application to Risk-Taking Behavior

TL;DR: The research shows that individuals who exhibit high levels of risk-taking behavior in one content area can exhibit moderate levels in other risky domains, and the results indicate that risk taking among targeted subsamples can be explained within a cost-benefit framework and is largely mediated by the perceived benefit of the activity, and to a lesser extentBy the perceived risk.
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When less is more: Information, emotional arousal and the ecological reframing of the Yerkes-Dodson law

TL;DR: The authors argue that the relationship depicted by this collapsed version of the Yerkes-Dodson law is far too simplistic to account for the complex relationship between various cognitive functions and emotional arousal.
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Preschoolers' allocations in the dictator game : The role of moral emotions

TL;DR: The authors explored how 3-5-year-old children allocate resources in the dictator game, and whether participants' understanding of moral emotions predicted allocations, and found that participants judged moral rule violations, attributed emotions to hypothetical violators and to the self as violator, and judged the character of the violator.
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Risk-Taking Differences Across the Adult Life Span: A Question of Age and Domain

TL;DR: The findings reveal that risk-taking tendencies in the financial domain reduce steeply in older age (at least for men), while risk taking in the social domain instead increases slightly from young to middle age, before reducing sharply in later life.
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"Neither an Angel nor an Ant": Emotion as an Aid to Bounded Rationality

TL;DR: In this article, it is suggested that emotions work together with rational thinking in two distinct ways, and thereby function as an additional source of bounded rationality, and the aim is not to offer an alternative to bounded rationality; rather, the purpose is to elaborate and supplement themes emerging out of the bounded rationality.