There exist evidence that asymmetrical information do exist between litigants: not in a way supporting Bebchuk (1984)'s assumption that defendants' degree of fault is a private information, but more likely, as a result of parties' predictive power of the outcome at trial (Osborne, 1999). In this paper, we suggest an explanation which allows to reconcilie different results obtained in experimental economics. We assume that litigants assess their estimates on the plaintiff's prevailing rate at trial using a two-stage process. First, they manipulate the available information in a way consistent with the self-serving bias. Then, these priors are weighted according to the individual's attitude towards risk. The existence of these two different c...
The law and economics literature on suit and settlement has tended to focus on two alternative conce...
This paper offers a simple but powerful model of wishful thinking, cognitive dissonance, and related...
Cognitive researchers have identified numerous ways in which human reasoning diverges from the ratio...
There exist evidence that asymmetrical information do exist between litigants: not in a way supporti...
For contemporary legal theory, law is essentially an interpretative and hermeneutic practice (Ackerm...
Why do some legal disputes fail to settle? From a bird’s eye view, the literature offers two catego...
Parties engaged in a litigation generally enter the discovery process with different informations re...
Behavioral studies indicate that individuals do not always make objective decisions about risk. Vari...
There is strong evidence that in bargaining situations with asymmetric outside options people exhibi...
When court trials (or arbitration) are the mechanisms for resolving bargaining impasses, the costs...
In bargaining environments with uncertain impasse outcomes (e.g., litigation or labor strike outcome...
In bargaining environments with uncertain disagreement or “impasse” outcomes (e.g., litigation or la...
A persistently troubling question in the legal-economic literature is why cases proceed to trial. Li...
Human decision-making is often influenced by various departures from perfect rationality; it is also...
There is strong evidence that in bargaining situations with asymmetric outside options people exhibi...
The law and economics literature on suit and settlement has tended to focus on two alternative conce...
This paper offers a simple but powerful model of wishful thinking, cognitive dissonance, and related...
Cognitive researchers have identified numerous ways in which human reasoning diverges from the ratio...
There exist evidence that asymmetrical information do exist between litigants: not in a way supporti...
For contemporary legal theory, law is essentially an interpretative and hermeneutic practice (Ackerm...
Why do some legal disputes fail to settle? From a bird’s eye view, the literature offers two catego...
Parties engaged in a litigation generally enter the discovery process with different informations re...
Behavioral studies indicate that individuals do not always make objective decisions about risk. Vari...
There is strong evidence that in bargaining situations with asymmetric outside options people exhibi...
When court trials (or arbitration) are the mechanisms for resolving bargaining impasses, the costs...
In bargaining environments with uncertain impasse outcomes (e.g., litigation or labor strike outcome...
In bargaining environments with uncertain disagreement or “impasse” outcomes (e.g., litigation or la...
A persistently troubling question in the legal-economic literature is why cases proceed to trial. Li...
Human decision-making is often influenced by various departures from perfect rationality; it is also...
There is strong evidence that in bargaining situations with asymmetric outside options people exhibi...
The law and economics literature on suit and settlement has tended to focus on two alternative conce...
This paper offers a simple but powerful model of wishful thinking, cognitive dissonance, and related...
Cognitive researchers have identified numerous ways in which human reasoning diverges from the ratio...