A reputational perspective on rational framing effects.
Charles Adam DorisonPublished in: The Behavioral and brain sciences (2022)
To assess whether behaviors like framing effects are rational, researchers need to consider decision makers' goals. I argue that researchers should broaden the scope of analysis to include impression management goals. Under predictable conditions, behaviors traditionally considered irrational (e.g., loss-gain framing effects on risk preferences) can be reputationally rewarding, casting doubt on strict claims of irrationality.