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According to Warrington's model, patients with left posterior lesions should be particularly impaired in
Behavioral Economics
The branch of economic theory that combines insights from economics, psychology, and biology to make more accurate predictions about human behavior than conventional neoclassical economics, which is hampered by its core assumptions that people are fundamentally rational and almost entirely self-interested. Behavioral economics can explain framing effects, anchoring, mental accounting, the endowment effect, status quo bias, time inconsistency, and loss aversion.
Rational Decision Making
A systematic process of defining problems, evaluating alternatives, and choosing the most optimal solution based on logical and analytical reasoning.
Utility
The want-satisfying power of a good or service; the satisfaction or pleasure a consumer obtains from the consumption of a good or service (or from the consumption of a collection of goods and services).
Costly Temptations
Unnecessary expenses or indulgences that can detract from long-term financial goals and stability.
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Q5: Category-specific deficits may be an emergent property
Q8: Patient S.M., who had damage to the
Q14: The results of most single-cell studies of
Q37: One of the experimental strengths of brain-lesion
Q59: Lesions to the amygdala unconditioned responses to
Q63: A role of the dorsal visual system
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Q94: The equilibrium potential is the membrane voltage
Q105: According to Katz, when managers have the