I assume that's the point of the thirty-days-out version of the experiment--imposing a delay on either amount. Or were you wondering if it comes into play even for so small a delay? That is, where's the cutoff at which people will switch between the two behaviors?
I would also take $120 tomorrow, but I'm also poor enough that an extra $20 is a big deal. There's another way the percentage thing comes into play: the ratio of the potential gain to one's current funds.
Or were you wondering if it comes into play even for so small a delay? That is, where's the cutoff at which people will switch between the two behaviors?
Yes, this is about what I had in mind.
A couple years ago, Aaron Swartz blogged about what he called the "percentage fallacy":
He recently followed up with a speculation that this may explain some irrational behaviour normally attributed to hyperbolic discounting:
Is this a real thing? Is there any such research? Is there existing evidence that does especially support the usual hyperbolic discounting explanation over this?