• About
    • About the Center for Public Interest Communications
    • What is Public Interest Communications?
    • Our Team
    • Theories We Use
    • Center Updates
    • Programs & Affiliates
      • frank gathering
      • The Research Prize in Public Interest Communications
      • Journal of Public Interest Communications
      • UF Programs
    • Our Approach to Generative Artificial Intelligence
    • Contact Us
    • Job: Center Research Assistant
  • SOLUTIONS
    • Beyond Raising Awareness
    • Become a Great Science Communicator
    • Fixing Data’s Demand Problem
    • Why your narrative change strategy isn’t working
    • How to reach people who don’t already agree with you
    • Why Your Science Communication Isn’t Landing
    • Services
      • Strategy Consulting
      • Issue Research
      • Training – Frameworks and Custom
  • Frameworks
  • Training
    • Programs
    • Professional Development
      • Learn on your schedule
      • Beyond raising awareness: How to create lasting change
      • Science Communications Course 
      • Strategic Communications Academy for UF Leaders & Scholars
  • RESOURCES
    • Case Studies
    • Newsletter
    • Scholarship & Publications
Center for Public Interest Communications
Support
  • About
    • About the Center for Public Interest Communications
    • What is Public Interest Communications?
    • Our Team
    • Theories We Use
    • Center Updates
    • Programs & Affiliates
      • frank gathering
      • The Research Prize in Public Interest Communications
      • Journal of Public Interest Communications
      • UF Programs
    • Our Approach to Generative Artificial Intelligence
    • Contact Us
    • Job: Center Research Assistant
  • SOLUTIONS
    • Beyond Raising Awareness
    • Become a Great Science Communicator
    • Fixing Data’s Demand Problem
    • Why your narrative change strategy isn’t working
    • How to reach people who don’t already agree with you
    • Why Your Science Communication Isn’t Landing
    • Services
      • Strategy Consulting
      • Issue Research
      • Training – Frameworks and Custom
  • Frameworks
  • Training
    • Programs
    • Professional Development
      • Learn on your schedule
      • Beyond raising awareness: How to create lasting change
      • Science Communications Course 
      • Strategic Communications Academy for UF Leaders & Scholars
  • RESOURCES
    • Case Studies
    • Newsletter
    • Scholarship & Publications
  • Theories We Use

Prospect Theory

  • November 16, 2021
  • 1 minute read
Total
0
Shares
0
0
0
0

Prospect theory comes from behavioral economics and is credited to Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky and their 1979 paper “Prospect Theory: An Analysis of Decision under Risk,” in which they argue individuals assess gains and losses in asymmetric ways. In other words, there is more aversion to loss than inclination toward gains. This tendency, they argue, contributes to risk aversion in choices involving sure gains and to risk-seeking in choices involving sure losses.

This has real-world effects in that the overweighting of low probabilities may contribute to the attractiveness of insurance and gambling.

This theory stands in contrast to expected utility theory, which expects people to act the same in terms of loss and gains and to always try to maximize utility; yet, prospect theory holds up under rigorous studies in the real world, as opposed to expected utility theory.

Citations: Kahneman, D., & Tversky, A. (1979). Prospect theory: An analysis of decision under risk. Econometrica, 47(2), 263-291. doi:10.2307/1914185

Post, T., Van den Assem, M., Baltussen, G., & Thaler, R. (2008). Deal or no deal? Decision making under risk in a large-payoff game show. The American Economic Review, 98(1), 38-71. Retrieved February 22, 2021, from http://www.jstor.org/stable/29729963

Total
0
Shares
Share 0
Tweet 0
Share 0
Previous Article
  • Theories We Use

Motivational Interviewing

  • November 16, 2021
View Post
Next Article
  • Theories We Use

Psychological Distance

  • November 16, 2021
View Post
Professional Development
  • Beyond raising awareness: How to create lasting change
  • Strategic Communications Academy for UF Leaders & Scholars
  • Science Communications Course 
More of our work
  • Philanthropy's New Voice: Building Trust with Deeper Stories and Clear Language
    Philanthropy’s Messaging Creates Confusion. Telling Better Stories Can Build Trust
  • The Back-of-the-Envelope Guide to Communications Strategy
  • Why Intersectional Stories Are Key to Helping the Communities We Serve
  • The Science of Belief: Move Beyond “Us” and “Them” to “We”
Latest from the Center
  • Most Americans Support Freedom of Information. Almost None Have Ever Used It.
  • October 2025 nationwide survey sheds light on Americans’ increasing worry about housing affordability
  • 2025 ‘Real Good Census’ Reveals a Strategically Vital Field with Strong Rewards, Marking Significant Growth
  • composite image of Audrey Goldfarb and text stating "Science isn't personal: why communicating emotion isn't 'soft,' it's strategic"
    Changemakers in Action: Dr. Audrey Goldfarb
How We Help – Case Studies
  • Council on Foundations - Largest study on narratives about philanthropy
    Largest Study on Narratives About Philanthropy with the Council on Foundations
  • illustration
    Innovation Service of UNHCR: the UN Refugee Agency
  • BROKE project screenshot
    Re-examining narratives on poverty and wealth — the BROKE project
UF Logo

Center for Public Interest Communications
PO Box 118400
Gainesville, FL 32611-8400

An auxiliary unit of the College of Journalism and Communications

Copyright © 2026

Contact Us

We are eager to chat with you about your project or training need.

Send us a note

The Center for Public Interest Communications, the first of its kind in the nation, is designed to study, test and apply the science of strategic communication for change. We are based at the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications.

  • Change Communication
  • Science Communication
  • Strategic Communication
  • Broader Impacts
  • Public Interest Communication
  • Narrative Change
  • Leadership Development
  • Strategy Development
  • Effective Presentations
  • Research Translation & Insights

Input your search keywords and press Enter.