To investigate the effect of time horizon on investment behavior, this paper reports the results of an experiment in which business graduate students provided certainty equivalents and judged various dimensions of the outcome distribution of simple gambles that were played either once or repeatedly for 5 or 50 times. Systematic mistakes in the ex-ante estimations of the distributions of outcomes after (independent) repeated plays were observed. Despite correctly realizing that outcome standard deviation increases with the number of plays, respondents showed evidence of Samuelson's (1963) fallacy of large numbers. Perceived risk judgments showed only low correlations with standard deviation estimates, but were instead related to the anticipa...
We measure the marginal effects of two crucial dimensions of the Investment Game design of Gneezy an...
AbstractIn laboratory experiments we explore the effects of communication and group decision making ...
The gambler’s fallacy, also known as the Monte Carlo fallacy or the fallacy of the maturity of chanc...
To investigate the effect of time horizon on investment behavior, this paper reports the results of ...
For a long investment period investment consultants usually recommend a larger proportion of risky a...
Investment managers generally subscribe to the principle of time diversification. This implies that ...
This paper investigates the behaviour in repeated decision situations. The experimental study shows...
Does the risk of an investment change with its timehorizon? In this article we put to test the compe...
“Time incongruency” occurs when there is a mismatch between the return period used to asse...
The incentivized risky investment game has become a popular tool in lab-in-the-field experiments for...
Can luck predict risk-taking behavior in games of chance? Economists have not widely studied this is...
Anecdotal evidence suggests that in a gambling environment people might violate "pre-commitment...
In a recent QJE-article, Gneezy and Potters (1997) present experimental evidence for the impact of f...
Investment behavior is traditionally investigated with the assumption that risky investment ...
Time diversification which is the idea of there being less riskiness over longer investment horizons...
We measure the marginal effects of two crucial dimensions of the Investment Game design of Gneezy an...
AbstractIn laboratory experiments we explore the effects of communication and group decision making ...
The gambler’s fallacy, also known as the Monte Carlo fallacy or the fallacy of the maturity of chanc...
To investigate the effect of time horizon on investment behavior, this paper reports the results of ...
For a long investment period investment consultants usually recommend a larger proportion of risky a...
Investment managers generally subscribe to the principle of time diversification. This implies that ...
This paper investigates the behaviour in repeated decision situations. The experimental study shows...
Does the risk of an investment change with its timehorizon? In this article we put to test the compe...
“Time incongruency” occurs when there is a mismatch between the return period used to asse...
The incentivized risky investment game has become a popular tool in lab-in-the-field experiments for...
Can luck predict risk-taking behavior in games of chance? Economists have not widely studied this is...
Anecdotal evidence suggests that in a gambling environment people might violate "pre-commitment...
In a recent QJE-article, Gneezy and Potters (1997) present experimental evidence for the impact of f...
Investment behavior is traditionally investigated with the assumption that risky investment ...
Time diversification which is the idea of there being less riskiness over longer investment horizons...
We measure the marginal effects of two crucial dimensions of the Investment Game design of Gneezy an...
AbstractIn laboratory experiments we explore the effects of communication and group decision making ...
The gambler’s fallacy, also known as the Monte Carlo fallacy or the fallacy of the maturity of chanc...