Risk and reward are negatively correlated in a wide variety of environments, and in many cases this trade off approximates a fair bet. Pleskac and Hertwig (2014) recently proposed that people have internalized this relationship and use it as the basis for probability estimation and subsequent choice under conditions of uncertainty. Specifically, they showed that risky options with high-value outcomes are inferred to have lower probability than options offering a less valuable reward. We report two experiments that test a simple corollary of this idea. In both studies, participants estimated the magnitude of prizes offered by lotteries with known win-probabilities. The relationship between estimates and probabilities followed the power relat...
It has long been assumed in economic theory that multi-attribute decisions involving several attribu...
Experiences form part and parcel of life. As suggested by existing literature, past experiences may ...
Varying several parameters of single-stage lottery choice tasks we investigate the question which fe...
Risk and reward are negatively correlated in a wide variety of environments, and in many cases this ...
Why would people pay more for a $50 gift certificate than for the opportunity to receive a gift cert...
There are two means of changing the expected value of a risk: changing the probability of a reward o...
Abstract In experiments individual risk attitudes can be induced by applying the binary lottery-tech...
There are two means of changing the expected value of a risk: changing the probability of a reward o...
We explore the linkage between financial risk tolerance (FRT) and risk aversion. To do this, we obta...
Most decisions made in real-life situations are risky because they are associated with possible nega...
The current study uses a lottery-based paradigm to examine how risk taking is affected by two specif...
Whether buying stocks or playing the slots, people making real-world risky decisions often rely on t...
The literature has distinguished decisions made under risk (with objective probabilities) and uncert...
Imagine that you own a five-outcome gamble with the following payoffs and probabilities: ($100, .20;...
We report the evidence of a multi-stage lab experiment on individual decision- making under ambiguit...
It has long been assumed in economic theory that multi-attribute decisions involving several attribu...
Experiences form part and parcel of life. As suggested by existing literature, past experiences may ...
Varying several parameters of single-stage lottery choice tasks we investigate the question which fe...
Risk and reward are negatively correlated in a wide variety of environments, and in many cases this ...
Why would people pay more for a $50 gift certificate than for the opportunity to receive a gift cert...
There are two means of changing the expected value of a risk: changing the probability of a reward o...
Abstract In experiments individual risk attitudes can be induced by applying the binary lottery-tech...
There are two means of changing the expected value of a risk: changing the probability of a reward o...
We explore the linkage between financial risk tolerance (FRT) and risk aversion. To do this, we obta...
Most decisions made in real-life situations are risky because they are associated with possible nega...
The current study uses a lottery-based paradigm to examine how risk taking is affected by two specif...
Whether buying stocks or playing the slots, people making real-world risky decisions often rely on t...
The literature has distinguished decisions made under risk (with objective probabilities) and uncert...
Imagine that you own a five-outcome gamble with the following payoffs and probabilities: ($100, .20;...
We report the evidence of a multi-stage lab experiment on individual decision- making under ambiguit...
It has long been assumed in economic theory that multi-attribute decisions involving several attribu...
Experiences form part and parcel of life. As suggested by existing literature, past experiences may ...
Varying several parameters of single-stage lottery choice tasks we investigate the question which fe...