Sebastian Gluth
@sgluth.bsky.social
Professor for Cognitive Modelling & Decision Neuroscience (@cmdn-lab.bsky.social) at the University of Hamburg (@uni-hamburg.de). Interested in raising two kids, bouldering, football, and other things (if time permits).
Reposted by Sebastian Gluth
Read our paper if you're curious or reach out if you have any questions. Kudos to my great coauthor team Tobia Spampatti
@tspampatti.bsky.social, Sebastian Gluth @sgluth.bsky.social , Kim-Pong Tam & Ulf Hahnel. Happy Halloween everyone 🎃🧛 /end
@tspampatti.bsky.social, Sebastian Gluth @sgluth.bsky.social , Kim-Pong Tam & Ulf Hahnel. Happy Halloween everyone 🎃🧛 /end
October 29, 2025 at 8:00 PM
Read our paper if you're curious or reach out if you have any questions. Kudos to my great coauthor team Tobia Spampatti
@tspampatti.bsky.social, Sebastian Gluth @sgluth.bsky.social , Kim-Pong Tam & Ulf Hahnel. Happy Halloween everyone 🎃🧛 /end
@tspampatti.bsky.social, Sebastian Gluth @sgluth.bsky.social , Kim-Pong Tam & Ulf Hahnel. Happy Halloween everyone 🎃🧛 /end
Reposted by Sebastian Gluth
In contrast, we found only response deliberation to increase for behaviorally less effective numeric translations (carbon emissions in kg).
September 8, 2025 at 7:32 AM
In contrast, we found only response deliberation to increase for behaviorally less effective numeric translations (carbon emissions in kg).
Reposted by Sebastian Gluth
Our modeling results suggest that a translation in form of an evaluative rating caused participants to make more ecological choices as a result of a shift in attribute weights in favor of the translated attribute, a decreased attentional bias on the attended option, and increased deliberation.
September 8, 2025 at 7:32 AM
Our modeling results suggest that a translation in form of an evaluative rating caused participants to make more ecological choices as a result of a shift in attribute weights in favor of the translated attribute, a decreased attentional bias on the attended option, and increased deliberation.
Reposted by Sebastian Gluth
Attribute translations promote behavior change by translating decision-relevant information into more meaningful units and have been widely adopted by policy makers (e.g., EU energy label). However, little is known about the computational mechanisms that underlie their effects on behavior.
September 8, 2025 at 7:32 AM
Attribute translations promote behavior change by translating decision-relevant information into more meaningful units and have been widely adopted by policy makers (e.g., EU energy label). However, little is known about the computational mechanisms that underlie their effects on behavior.