“…The evidence presented in this study adds to previous studies showing parallel value-distorting effects in humans and insects, including decoy effects (Sasaki & Pratt, 2011;Tan et al, 2014Tan et al, , 2015, risk aversion (De Agrò, Grimwade, & Czaczkes, 2019;Shafir, Wiegmann, Smith, & Real, 1999;Shapiro, 2000;Waddington, Allen, & Heinrich, 1981), discounting (Cheng, Peña, Porter, & Irwin, 2002;Wendt & Czaczkes, 2017), and expectation-driven valuation (Bitterman, 1976;Couvillon & Bitterman, 1984), suggesting that insights into human behavior can, in part, be transferred to insects. Insect-based comparative psychology studies allow much tighter control over experimental subjects and conditions, offering stringent tests of basic insights from human psychology and the experimental flexibility to test hypotheses untestable on human subjects.…”