People exaggerate the degree to which their future tastes will resemble their current tastes. We present evidence from a variety of domains which demon-strates the prevalence of such projection bias, develop a formal model of it, and use this model to demonstrate its importance in economic environments. We show that, when people exhibit habit formation, projection bias leads people to consume too much early in life, and to decide, as time passes, to consume more—and save less—than originally planned. Projection bias can also lead to misguided pur-chases of durable goods. We discuss a number of additional applications and implications. The great source of both the misery and disorders of human life, seems to arise from over-rating the differ...
SummaryThe ability to anticipate is a hallmark of cognition. Inferences about what will occur in the...
International audienceThe projection bias corresponds to the human tendency to project current prefe...
This article studies whether anomalies in consumption can be explained by a behavioural model in whi...
People underappreciate how their own behavior and exogenous factors affect their future utility, and...
Why do we believe that more money will buy us more happiness (when in fact it does not)? In this pap...
This dissertation examines consumers\u27 ability to accurately anticipate the hedonic value they wil...
1 When faced with the decision to adopt a product or service innovation consumers often need to fore...
Beliefs about the future self's financial conditions and preferences are important when deciding how...
Evidence suggests that people understand qualitatively how tastes change over time, but underestimat...
The aim of this study is to test whether projection bias exists in consumers purchasing decisions fo...
The aim of this study is to test whether projection bias exists in consumers’ purchasing decisions f...
The relevance of projection bias in decision making processes has been widely studied, but not speci...
This paper presents new evidence on the expectation formation process from a Dutch household survey....
Our perceptions of what other people do often affect what we do. In these situations, perceptual bi...
The economics of intertemporal choice has varied the specification of every key aspect of modeling b...
SummaryThe ability to anticipate is a hallmark of cognition. Inferences about what will occur in the...
International audienceThe projection bias corresponds to the human tendency to project current prefe...
This article studies whether anomalies in consumption can be explained by a behavioural model in whi...
People underappreciate how their own behavior and exogenous factors affect their future utility, and...
Why do we believe that more money will buy us more happiness (when in fact it does not)? In this pap...
This dissertation examines consumers\u27 ability to accurately anticipate the hedonic value they wil...
1 When faced with the decision to adopt a product or service innovation consumers often need to fore...
Beliefs about the future self's financial conditions and preferences are important when deciding how...
Evidence suggests that people understand qualitatively how tastes change over time, but underestimat...
The aim of this study is to test whether projection bias exists in consumers purchasing decisions fo...
The aim of this study is to test whether projection bias exists in consumers’ purchasing decisions f...
The relevance of projection bias in decision making processes has been widely studied, but not speci...
This paper presents new evidence on the expectation formation process from a Dutch household survey....
Our perceptions of what other people do often affect what we do. In these situations, perceptual bi...
The economics of intertemporal choice has varied the specification of every key aspect of modeling b...
SummaryThe ability to anticipate is a hallmark of cognition. Inferences about what will occur in the...
International audienceThe projection bias corresponds to the human tendency to project current prefe...
This article studies whether anomalies in consumption can be explained by a behavioural model in whi...