We investigate violations of consequentialism in the form of the stochastic dominance property. The property is shared by many theories of choice and implies that the decision-maker prefers receiving the best outcome for sure over all lotteries that involve multiple outcomes. We run experiments to demonstrate that dominated randomization can be attractive. In treatments where decision-makers are asked to submit multiple decisions without knowing which one is relevant, many participants submit contradictory sets of decisions and thereby induce a dominated lottery between outcomes. Explicit choice of non-consequentialist randomization is observed in a separate treatment. A possible reason for the effect is the desire to avoid having to make t...
Contains fulltext : 95379.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)In this paper,...
We compare experimentally the revealed distributional preferences of individuals and teams in alloca...
Any individual's response intended to be random should be as probable as any other. However, 3 exper...
We investigate violations of consequentialism in the form of the stochastic dominance property. The ...
We investigate violations of consequentialism in the form of the stochastic dominance property. The ...
We investigate violations of consequentialism in the form of the stochastic dominance property. The ...
We conduct an experiment to investigate the origin of stochastic choice and to differentiate between...
We design a laboratory experiment to identify whether randomization behavior represents a stable “ty...
Individuals exhibit preferences for randomization if they prefer random mixtures of two bets to each...
We study revealed preferences towards the use of random procedures in allocation mechanisms. We repo...
Thesis advisor: Uzi SegalThis dissertation consists of three chapters analyzing preferences for rand...
We investigate the possibility that a decision-maker prefers to avoid making a decision and instead ...
Individuals exhibit a randomization preference if they prefer random mixtures of two bets to each of...
Recent research invokes preference imprecision to explain violations of individual decision theory. ...
We investigate the implications of Salience Theory for the classical preference reversal phenomenon,...
Contains fulltext : 95379.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)In this paper,...
We compare experimentally the revealed distributional preferences of individuals and teams in alloca...
Any individual's response intended to be random should be as probable as any other. However, 3 exper...
We investigate violations of consequentialism in the form of the stochastic dominance property. The ...
We investigate violations of consequentialism in the form of the stochastic dominance property. The ...
We investigate violations of consequentialism in the form of the stochastic dominance property. The ...
We conduct an experiment to investigate the origin of stochastic choice and to differentiate between...
We design a laboratory experiment to identify whether randomization behavior represents a stable “ty...
Individuals exhibit preferences for randomization if they prefer random mixtures of two bets to each...
We study revealed preferences towards the use of random procedures in allocation mechanisms. We repo...
Thesis advisor: Uzi SegalThis dissertation consists of three chapters analyzing preferences for rand...
We investigate the possibility that a decision-maker prefers to avoid making a decision and instead ...
Individuals exhibit a randomization preference if they prefer random mixtures of two bets to each of...
Recent research invokes preference imprecision to explain violations of individual decision theory. ...
We investigate the implications of Salience Theory for the classical preference reversal phenomenon,...
Contains fulltext : 95379.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)In this paper,...
We compare experimentally the revealed distributional preferences of individuals and teams in alloca...
Any individual's response intended to be random should be as probable as any other. However, 3 exper...