UNI NOVA – Research Magazine of the Ðǿմ«Ã½
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Alumni
Global challenges and the coronavirus crisis.
Text: Pascale Baeriswyl / Pascale Baeriswyl studied law, history and French literature and linguistics at the Ðǿմ«Ã½. Today she is an ambassador to the UN in New York.
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Column
Bolaño’s The Savage Detectives: An unflinching, urgent narrative.
Text: Moisés Mayordomo / My book: The theologian Prof. Dr. Moisés Mayordomo recommends the 1998 published novel "Los detectives salvajes" by the Chilean writer Roberto Bolaño.
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Dossier
“Different people make different decisions.â€
Interview: Christoph Dieffenbacher / Research into human decision-making brings together the fields of psychology and economics. One of the first researchers to study this topic intensively at the Ðǿմ«Ã½ is Professor Jörg Rieskamp.
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Dossier
How our memory can trick us.
Text: Martin Hicklin / When we have to make a choice, we often select the options that trigger the strongest memories. One reason for this is that weak memories tend to make us feel uncertain.
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Dossier
How tossing coins can help.
Text: David Herrmann / When faced with a difficult decision, flipping a coin can make things easier. You’re under no obligation to do as it says, but it could trigger feelings and thought processes.
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Dossier
“Risk can be positive, too.â€
Interview: Andreas W. Schmid / What determines our willingness to take risks? Cognitive psychologist Jana Jarecki tackles this question in her research at the Ðǿմ«Ã½. Her studies show that risk is generally not an end in itself, but rather a means to the end of satisfying certain needs.
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Dossier
How we make decisions.
Which is the best option to choose? Should I take a risk in doing so or rather avoid it? We make decisions throughout our lives – yet only few of these are made consciously.
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Dossier
If children held the purse strings.
Text: Christoph Dieffenbacher / Investments are not always made in an entirely rational manner. However, an experiment by an economist at the Ðǿմ«Ã½ shows that children already have the capacity to evaluate simple probabilities.
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Dossier
Once a risk-taker, always a risk-taker.
Text: Christoph Dieffenbacher / It is well known that some people are more inclined to engage in hazardous or risky behavior than others. Individual attitudes in this regard, however, seem to follow a clear pattern over the course of a lifetime – in a similar manner to intelligence. Psychologists in Basel are investigating how people’s attitudes to risk are formed.