Many violations of the Independence axiom of Expected Utility can be traced to subjects' attraction to risk-free prospects. The key axiom in this paper, Negative Certainty Independence (Dillenberger, 2010), formalizes this tendency. Our main result is a utility representation of all preferences over monetary lotteries that satisfy Negative Certainty Independence together with basic rationality postulates. Such preferences can be represented as if the agent were unsure of how to evaluate a given lottery p; instead, she has in mind a set of possible utility functions over outcomes and displays a cautious behavior: she computes the certainty equivalent of p with respect to each possible function in the set and picks the smallest one. The set o...
An axiomatic account of rational risky choice is given which makes the impact of the decision maker'...
New foundations of uitlity and risk theory Expected utility theory is grounded on two questionable...
In a temporal context, sure outcomes may yield higher utility than risky ones as they are available ...
Many violations of the Independence axiom of Expected Utility can be traced to subjects' attraction ...
AbstractDillenberger (2010) introduced the negative certainty independence (NCI) axiom, which captur...
Abstract: This paper develops a theory for probabilistic models for risky choices that can be viewed...
Abstract: This paper develops a theory of probabilistic models for risky choices. Part of this theor...
This paper develops a theory of probabilistic models for risky choices. Part of this theory can be v...
Abstract. This paper presents a new theory of decision under risk. Individual preferences over lotte...
We study preferences over lotteries which do not necessarily satisfy completeness. We provide a char...
Two of the most well-known regularities observed in preferences under risk and uncertainty are ambig...
Savage (1954) provided a set of axioms on preferences over acts that were equiva-lent to the existen...
We introduce the notion of Tuned Risk Aversion as a possible interpretation of non-expected utility ...
A large literature has documented violations of expected utility consistent with a preference for ce...
The decision-making situation under risk is defined and the certainty equivalent of a lottery with u...
An axiomatic account of rational risky choice is given which makes the impact of the decision maker'...
New foundations of uitlity and risk theory Expected utility theory is grounded on two questionable...
In a temporal context, sure outcomes may yield higher utility than risky ones as they are available ...
Many violations of the Independence axiom of Expected Utility can be traced to subjects' attraction ...
AbstractDillenberger (2010) introduced the negative certainty independence (NCI) axiom, which captur...
Abstract: This paper develops a theory for probabilistic models for risky choices that can be viewed...
Abstract: This paper develops a theory of probabilistic models for risky choices. Part of this theor...
This paper develops a theory of probabilistic models for risky choices. Part of this theory can be v...
Abstract. This paper presents a new theory of decision under risk. Individual preferences over lotte...
We study preferences over lotteries which do not necessarily satisfy completeness. We provide a char...
Two of the most well-known regularities observed in preferences under risk and uncertainty are ambig...
Savage (1954) provided a set of axioms on preferences over acts that were equiva-lent to the existen...
We introduce the notion of Tuned Risk Aversion as a possible interpretation of non-expected utility ...
A large literature has documented violations of expected utility consistent with a preference for ce...
The decision-making situation under risk is defined and the certainty equivalent of a lottery with u...
An axiomatic account of rational risky choice is given which makes the impact of the decision maker'...
New foundations of uitlity and risk theory Expected utility theory is grounded on two questionable...
In a temporal context, sure outcomes may yield higher utility than risky ones as they are available ...