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A Dual-Self Model of Impulse Control

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2006

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American Economic Association
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Fudenberg, Drew, and David K. Levine. 2006. A dual-self model of impulse control. American Economic Review 96(5): 1449-1476.

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We propose that a simple “dual-self” model gives a unified explanation for several empirical regularities, including the apparent time inconsistency that has motivated models of quasi-hyperbolic discounting and Rabin's paradox of risk aversion in the large and small. The model also implies that self-control costs imply excess delay, as in the O'Donoghue and Rabin models of quasi-hyperbolic utility, and it explains experimental evidence that increased cognitive load makes temptations harder to resist. The base version of our model is consistent with the Gul-Pesendorfer axioms, but we argue that these axioms must be relaxed to account for the effect of cognitive load.

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A Dual-Self Model of Impulse Control… : DASH Story 2015-04-14
I study Applied Psychologie at the Hanzehogeschool Groningen in the Netherlands. Right now I'm doing an internship in South Africa at a non-profit organisation called Home of Hope who works with children who suffer from FASD. Since these children often have problems with impulse control I'm writing on a small paper over impulse control with the goal to give some possible interventions. The article of the dual self model helps me as a theoretical base for impulse control, so thanks for giving it out for free!