Toward a psychology of surrogate decision-making

In everyday life many of the decisions that we make are made on behalf of other people. A growing body of research suggests that we often, but not always, make different decisions on behalf of other people than the other person would choose. This is problematic in the practical sense of legally desi...

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Main Authors: Tunney, Richard J., Ziegler, Fenja V.
Format: Article
Published: Sage 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29321/
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author Tunney, Richard J.
Ziegler, Fenja V.
author_facet Tunney, Richard J.
Ziegler, Fenja V.
author_sort Tunney, Richard J.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description In everyday life many of the decisions that we make are made on behalf of other people. A growing body of research suggests that we often, but not always, make different decisions on behalf of other people than the other person would choose. This is problematic in the practical sense of legally designated surrogate decision-makers who may not meet the substituted judgment standard. Here we review evidence from studies of surrogate decision- making and examine the extent to which surrogate decision-making accurately predicts the recipient’s wishes, or if it is an incomplete or distorted application of our own decision- making processes. We find no existing domain general model of surrogate decision-making. We propose a framework by which surrogate decision-making can be assessed and a novel domain general theory as a unifying explanatory concept for surrogate decisions.
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spelling nottingham-293212020-05-04T20:06:43Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29321/ Toward a psychology of surrogate decision-making Tunney, Richard J. Ziegler, Fenja V. In everyday life many of the decisions that we make are made on behalf of other people. A growing body of research suggests that we often, but not always, make different decisions on behalf of other people than the other person would choose. This is problematic in the practical sense of legally designated surrogate decision-makers who may not meet the substituted judgment standard. Here we review evidence from studies of surrogate decision- making and examine the extent to which surrogate decision-making accurately predicts the recipient’s wishes, or if it is an incomplete or distorted application of our own decision- making processes. We find no existing domain general model of surrogate decision-making. We propose a framework by which surrogate decision-making can be assessed and a novel domain general theory as a unifying explanatory concept for surrogate decisions. Sage 2015-11 Article PeerReviewed Tunney, Richard J. and Ziegler, Fenja V. (2015) Toward a psychology of surrogate decision-making. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 10 (6). pp. 880-885. ISSN 1745-6924 thinking reasoning judgment decision-making surrogate medical interpersonal relations family emotion http://pps.sagepub.com/content/10/6/880 doi:10.1177/1745691615598508 doi:10.1177/1745691615598508
spellingShingle thinking
reasoning
judgment
decision-making
surrogate
medical
interpersonal relations
family
emotion
Tunney, Richard J.
Ziegler, Fenja V.
Toward a psychology of surrogate decision-making
title Toward a psychology of surrogate decision-making
title_full Toward a psychology of surrogate decision-making
title_fullStr Toward a psychology of surrogate decision-making
title_full_unstemmed Toward a psychology of surrogate decision-making
title_short Toward a psychology of surrogate decision-making
title_sort toward a psychology of surrogate decision-making
topic thinking
reasoning
judgment
decision-making
surrogate
medical
interpersonal relations
family
emotion
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29321/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29321/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29321/