<p>The Allais Paradox is a well-known bias in which people's preferences result in contradictory choices between two normatively identical gamble pairs. Studies have shown that these preference reversals depend on how information is described and presented. In an experiment, we investigate the Allais gambles in several formats including an experiential paradigm, where participants make selections from two blank buttons and get an outcome as a result of a draw from distributions of outcomes in the selected gamble. Results indicate that a large proportion of Allais reversals are found in the traditional descriptive format, they are reduced when gambles are presented in a descriptive table format, and they disappear when choices are made from ...
College students made choices in binary lottery situations involving small amounts of money-payoffs ...
The ‘preference reversal phenomenon’ – a systematic disparity between people’s valuations and choice...
Individuals often have only incompletely known preferences when choosing between pair-wise gambles. ...
The Allais Paradox is a well-known bias in which people's preferences result in contradictory choice...
The common consequence effect and preference reversals are two of the foundational violations of the...
Although there are alternative models which can explain the Allais paradox with non-standard prefere...
Experimental studies of choice behavior document distinct, and sometimes contradictory, deviations f...
International audienceConventional economic theory assumes that agents should be consistent across d...
This paper sheds new light on the preference reversal phenomenon by analyzing decision times in the ...
This paper sheds new light on the preference reversal phenomenon by analyzing decision times in the ...
This paper sheds new light on the preference reversal phenomenon by analyzing decision times in the ...
In preference reversals, subjects express different rankings over a set of alternatives depending on...
Whereas many others have scrutinized the Allais paradox from a theoretical angle, we study the parad...
This paper investigates whether some part of the preference reversal phenomenon can be attributed to...
This paper investigates whether some part of the preference reversal phenomenon can be attributed to...
College students made choices in binary lottery situations involving small amounts of money-payoffs ...
The ‘preference reversal phenomenon’ – a systematic disparity between people’s valuations and choice...
Individuals often have only incompletely known preferences when choosing between pair-wise gambles. ...
The Allais Paradox is a well-known bias in which people's preferences result in contradictory choice...
The common consequence effect and preference reversals are two of the foundational violations of the...
Although there are alternative models which can explain the Allais paradox with non-standard prefere...
Experimental studies of choice behavior document distinct, and sometimes contradictory, deviations f...
International audienceConventional economic theory assumes that agents should be consistent across d...
This paper sheds new light on the preference reversal phenomenon by analyzing decision times in the ...
This paper sheds new light on the preference reversal phenomenon by analyzing decision times in the ...
This paper sheds new light on the preference reversal phenomenon by analyzing decision times in the ...
In preference reversals, subjects express different rankings over a set of alternatives depending on...
Whereas many others have scrutinized the Allais paradox from a theoretical angle, we study the parad...
This paper investigates whether some part of the preference reversal phenomenon can be attributed to...
This paper investigates whether some part of the preference reversal phenomenon can be attributed to...
College students made choices in binary lottery situations involving small amounts of money-payoffs ...
The ‘preference reversal phenomenon’ – a systematic disparity between people’s valuations and choice...
Individuals often have only incompletely known preferences when choosing between pair-wise gambles. ...