A number of highly cited papers by Flyvbjerg and associates have shown that ex ante infrastructure appraisals tend to be overly optimistic. Ex post evaluations indicate a bias where investment costs are higher and benefits lower on average than predicted ex ante. These authors argue that the bias must be attributed to intentional misrepresentation by project developers. This paper shows that the bias may arise simply as a selection bias, without there being any bias at all in predictions ex ante, and that such a bias is bound to arise whenever ex ante predictions are related to the decisions whether to implement projects. Using a database of projects we present examples indicating that the selection bias may be substantial. The examples als...
Although there is strong scientific consensus that climate change and environmental degradation are ...
We replicate the experiment proposed by Lisa R. Anderson and Sarah L. Stafford (2009) by conducting ...
There is a thick and persistent fog hanging over our democracies. When one looks at our political di...
A number of highly cited papers by Flyvbjerg and associates have shown that ex ante infrastructure a...
We examine the role of trustworthiness and trust in statistical inference, arguing that it is the ex...
Bayesian inference offers an optimal means of processing environmental information and so an advanta...
Self‐selection into treatment and self‐selection into the sample are major concerns of VAA research ...
With rare exception, actual tollroad traffic in many countries has failed to reproduce forecast traf...
We compare eye movement strategies across a range of different stimulus sets to test the prediction ...
Veritism, the position that truth is necessary for epistemic acceptability, seems to be in tension w...
Much of the social and medical sciences depend on randomised control trials. But while this may be c...
Causal inference using the difference‐in‐differences (DD) method relies on the untestable assumption...
In Ockham's Razors: A User's Guide, argues that parsimony considerations are epistemically relevant ...
Abstract: We introduce a new method for high‐dimensional, online changepoint detection in settings w...
This paper presents a set of guidelines, imported from the field of forecasting, that can help socia...
Although there is strong scientific consensus that climate change and environmental degradation are ...
We replicate the experiment proposed by Lisa R. Anderson and Sarah L. Stafford (2009) by conducting ...
There is a thick and persistent fog hanging over our democracies. When one looks at our political di...
A number of highly cited papers by Flyvbjerg and associates have shown that ex ante infrastructure a...
We examine the role of trustworthiness and trust in statistical inference, arguing that it is the ex...
Bayesian inference offers an optimal means of processing environmental information and so an advanta...
Self‐selection into treatment and self‐selection into the sample are major concerns of VAA research ...
With rare exception, actual tollroad traffic in many countries has failed to reproduce forecast traf...
We compare eye movement strategies across a range of different stimulus sets to test the prediction ...
Veritism, the position that truth is necessary for epistemic acceptability, seems to be in tension w...
Much of the social and medical sciences depend on randomised control trials. But while this may be c...
Causal inference using the difference‐in‐differences (DD) method relies on the untestable assumption...
In Ockham's Razors: A User's Guide, argues that parsimony considerations are epistemically relevant ...
Abstract: We introduce a new method for high‐dimensional, online changepoint detection in settings w...
This paper presents a set of guidelines, imported from the field of forecasting, that can help socia...
Although there is strong scientific consensus that climate change and environmental degradation are ...
We replicate the experiment proposed by Lisa R. Anderson and Sarah L. Stafford (2009) by conducting ...
There is a thick and persistent fog hanging over our democracies. When one looks at our political di...