A neural basis for dumb decisions: Why paying more or waiting in line for an item increases its value in our minds
medicalxpress.com·1d
🔬Cognitive Psychology
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waiting in line Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Ahab hunting down Moby Dick. Wile E. Coyote chasing the Road Runner. Learning Latin. Walking over hot coals. Standing in a long line for boba tea or entrance to a small, overpriced clothing retail store. Forking up for luxury nonsense. What do these activities have in common? They’re all examples of the overvaluation of what economists call "sunk costs": the price you’ve already irretrievably paid in time, money, effort, suffering, or any combination of them for an item, an experience, or a sense of self-esteem.

It’s a phenomenon we all recognize. It affects our behavior in ways that can be irrational. But we do it.

For my…

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