We investigate the “law of small numbers ” using a unique panel data set on lotto gambling. Because we can track individual players over time, we can measure how they react to outcomes of recent lotto drawings. We can therefore test whether they behave as if they believe they can predict lotto numbers based on recent drawings. While most players pick the same set of numbers week after week without regards of numbers drawn or anything else, we find that those who do change, act on average in the way predicted by the law of small numbers as formalized in recent behavioral theory. In particular, on average they move away from numbers that have recently been drawn, as suggested by the “gambler’s fallacy”, and move toward numbers that are on str...
We apply a novel daily time series data set of daily turnover from one of Britain’s leading bookmake...
The “gambler's fallacy” is the false belief that a random event is less likely to occur if the event...
We explore people’s preferences for numbers in large proprietary data sets from two different lotter...
We investigate the "law of small numbers" using a unique panel data set on lotto gambling. Because w...
We investigate the "law of small numbers" using a data set on lotto gambling that allows us to measu...
Although lotto games are better suited for testing the nature of human rationality than stock market...
There are many people who love playing lottery games for fun, and even for big prizes. For those who...
People facing choices under uncertainty, and gamblers in particular, are often subject to statistica...
We explore people’s preferences for numbers in large proprietary data sets from two different lotter...
The Chinese Online Lottery provides field evidence of three anomalies. The first anomaly, which has ...
Conscious selection describes the process by which lottery players choose numbers non-randomly on th...
We apply a novel daily time series data set of daily turnover from one of Britain’s leading bookmak...
JEL No. D14,D62,D81,H42,H71 We present an empirical test for the addictiveness of lottery gambling. ...
I explore a unique, individual level, lottery betting panel data and show that lottery gambling is s...
Some methods to test the randomness of the numbers drawn in the UK National Lottery are described. T...
We apply a novel daily time series data set of daily turnover from one of Britain’s leading bookmake...
The “gambler's fallacy” is the false belief that a random event is less likely to occur if the event...
We explore people’s preferences for numbers in large proprietary data sets from two different lotter...
We investigate the "law of small numbers" using a unique panel data set on lotto gambling. Because w...
We investigate the "law of small numbers" using a data set on lotto gambling that allows us to measu...
Although lotto games are better suited for testing the nature of human rationality than stock market...
There are many people who love playing lottery games for fun, and even for big prizes. For those who...
People facing choices under uncertainty, and gamblers in particular, are often subject to statistica...
We explore people’s preferences for numbers in large proprietary data sets from two different lotter...
The Chinese Online Lottery provides field evidence of three anomalies. The first anomaly, which has ...
Conscious selection describes the process by which lottery players choose numbers non-randomly on th...
We apply a novel daily time series data set of daily turnover from one of Britain’s leading bookmak...
JEL No. D14,D62,D81,H42,H71 We present an empirical test for the addictiveness of lottery gambling. ...
I explore a unique, individual level, lottery betting panel data and show that lottery gambling is s...
Some methods to test the randomness of the numbers drawn in the UK National Lottery are described. T...
We apply a novel daily time series data set of daily turnover from one of Britain’s leading bookmake...
The “gambler's fallacy” is the false belief that a random event is less likely to occur if the event...
We explore people’s preferences for numbers in large proprietary data sets from two different lotter...