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Recently published OHIO study reveals humans are impatient, even down to seconds

An 51社区 study seeking to understand the psychological mechanisms of waiting for a larger reward in contrast to instant gratification with a smaller reward was recently published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, a flagship journal of the American Psychological Association. 

The research team discussed in their paper how their findings show that people are impatient not only when thinking about whether to wait or not for a larger reward in the abstract, but they are even more impatient when they actually must wait to receive a larger reward. In the study, the amounts and delays were small (in cents and seconds), but even in the small-scale participants demonstrated myopic behavior, as in preferring the smaller payoff sooner.

鈥淚n this particular paper, we鈥檙e interested in how people make decisions that entail comparing the time that it takes to get something versus how much one will get,鈥 said Dr. Claudia Gonz谩lez Vallejo, a professor in the College of Arts and Sciences Department of Psychology and second author of the paper. 鈥淭hose types of experiments are under an umbrella of what is called intertemporal choice, which refers to studying how people make tradeoffs between amounts, either to gain or to lose, relative to the timing of those.鈥

The paper鈥檚 lead author is Dr. Ping Xu, currently of Shenzhen University鈥檚 School of Psychology, and the third author is Dr. Benjamin Vincent of University of Dundee鈥檚 School of Social Sciences. 

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OHIO alumnae Dr. Ping Xu

The paper is based on Xu鈥檚 dissertation from 2019 as she graduated from OHIO under Dr. Gonz谩lez Vallejo鈥檚 mentoring. 鈥淚 feel lucky, honored and touched. I am proud of my team,鈥 Xu said of having the paper finally published. 

In the study, the researchers made a realistic situation in which participants could actually experience the time of waiting to receive something, with payoffs and units of time adjusted to be smaller altogether, while at a computer. 

This worked by having a participant make decisions between coins that were small and could be received immediately, or larger ones that required a waiting period in seconds before they could be picked up. For each choice, the participant could thus wait and get something larger, or take the smaller reward. Two groups received identical choice options but differed on whether they had to wait to receive the larger payoff after each choice was made or not. In other words, one group experienced the delay after each selection, whereas the other group did not and expected waiting at the end of the experiment instead. 

Before the results, Gonz谩lez Vallejo thought that the time to wait was so small that it wouldn鈥檛 matter to participants. If it was only a few seconds, surely they would take the larger reward every time, she thought. However, that was not the result. 

鈥淲e found that in both situations, people did make the tradeoff between time and money. It wasn鈥檛 that they would just go for few more cents every time because the amounts of time were too small to even think about them. So, delays matter 鈥 even seconds to people matter,鈥 Gonz谩lez Vallejo said. 鈥淚n general, people are just very impatient.鈥 

鈥淸The results] overturned our initial plans and predictions, and led us towards something surprising, or to a direction we had never thought of,鈥 Xu said.

Using mathematical modeling, two reasons for the findings include that time feels longer when experiencing it and the amount of the reward is devalued when it is delayed, with the study finding support for both reasonings. Future empirical tests are needed to test these ideas further. 

Although the research project was started a couple years ago, Gonz谩lez Vallejo noted that the findings can be applicable to the current pandemic. 

For example, while some countries implemented earlier and longer lockdowns and mask mandates, others showed hesitation to implement such policies or did not wait through the mandates long enough for cases to decrease substantially, with cases continuing to grow. 

鈥淚 think a lot of experts right now come together and agree on some studies that have shown that if [the United States] had remained in lockdown, or if lockdowns were done earlier and longer, perhaps things would have unfolded differently,鈥 Gonz谩lez Vallejo said. 鈥淲aiting is not easy, as our study showed, and I think future research in terms of analyzing different countries鈥 policies with that in mind will show how some policies requiring patience ended up giving different outcomes for this pandemic.鈥 

Publishing in a flagship APA journal is extremely competitive and difficult, thus relief exists among the team for the accomplishment to have the work finally published in Journal of Experimental Psychology: General after several months.

鈥淲hen I saw the final publication, I felt that I have graduated for the second time,鈥 Xu said. 鈥淚 am lucky having [that] kind of experience.鈥

Published
July 23, 2020
Author
Staff reports