Experimental research on decision making under risk has until now always employed choice data in order to evaluate the empirical performance of expected utility and the alternative non-expected utility theories. The present paper performs a similar analysis which relies on pricing data instead of choice data. Since pricing data lead in many cases to a different ordering of lotteries than choices (e.g. the preference reversal phenomenon) our analysis may have fundamental different results than preceding investigations. We elicit three different types of pricing data: willingness-to-pay, willingness-to-accept and certainty equivalents under the Becker-DeGroot-Marschak (BDM) incentive mechanism. One of our main result shows that the comparativ...
The experimental as well as the nonmarket valuation literature include several examples of how an in...
The robust laboratory evidence of preference reversal for lotteries has been interpreted as a threat...
Individuals often have only incompletely known preferences when choosing between pair-wise gambles. ...
Experimental research on decision making under risk has until now always employed choice data in ord...
Experimental research on decision making under risk has until now always employed choice data in ord...
There is abundant literature in experimental research on decision making under risk, which compares,...
This article examines the preferences revealed by three non-hypothetical experiments. We found that ...
This paper presents an experimental study of common consequence effects in binary choice, willingnes...
To potentially reduce bias in hypothetical choice experiments, many studies have incentivized respon...
This paper addresses the apparent conflict between the results of experiments on individual choice a...
Typescript (photocopy).This study examines how people make decisions under risk and uncertainty. The...
We conduct a battery of experiments in which agents make choices from several pairs of all-loss-lott...
This paper provides the latest research developments in the method of choice experiments applied to ...
In choice experiments, it is commonly assumed that individuals make choices in static and certainty ...
Due to the importance of comparability and external validity of results, nonhypothetical experimenta...
The experimental as well as the nonmarket valuation literature include several examples of how an in...
The robust laboratory evidence of preference reversal for lotteries has been interpreted as a threat...
Individuals often have only incompletely known preferences when choosing between pair-wise gambles. ...
Experimental research on decision making under risk has until now always employed choice data in ord...
Experimental research on decision making under risk has until now always employed choice data in ord...
There is abundant literature in experimental research on decision making under risk, which compares,...
This article examines the preferences revealed by three non-hypothetical experiments. We found that ...
This paper presents an experimental study of common consequence effects in binary choice, willingnes...
To potentially reduce bias in hypothetical choice experiments, many studies have incentivized respon...
This paper addresses the apparent conflict between the results of experiments on individual choice a...
Typescript (photocopy).This study examines how people make decisions under risk and uncertainty. The...
We conduct a battery of experiments in which agents make choices from several pairs of all-loss-lott...
This paper provides the latest research developments in the method of choice experiments applied to ...
In choice experiments, it is commonly assumed that individuals make choices in static and certainty ...
Due to the importance of comparability and external validity of results, nonhypothetical experimenta...
The experimental as well as the nonmarket valuation literature include several examples of how an in...
The robust laboratory evidence of preference reversal for lotteries has been interpreted as a threat...
Individuals often have only incompletely known preferences when choosing between pair-wise gambles. ...