A natural economic interpretation of Prospect Theory is that people have preferences that are risk seeking in losses and risk averse in gains. Thus, according to this interpretation of the theory, individuals in an exchange economy facing only losses in wealth, would have concave preferences as opposed to the usual convex preferences. That is, if individuals could engage in trade that would reduce the magnitude of expected losses and change the variance associated with losses, they would have a tendency to seek higher variance and perhaps be willing to do so at the cost of a reduction of expected value of wealth. Such individuals would be willing to sell insurance at prices below the expected value. With concave preferences all competitive ...
Shortcomings revealed by experimental and theoretical researchers such as Allais (1953), Rabin (2000...
How can people's risk preferences be understood? Work from prospect theory (Kahneman & Tversky, 1979...
Extensive data has convincingly demonstrated that expected utility, the reigning economic theory of ...
A natural economic interpretation of Prospect Theory is that people have preferences that are risk s...
Exchange economies were created in which individuals faced losses. If people are risk seeking in th...
We study equilibrium trading strategies and market quality in an economy in which speculators displa...
Prospect theory, used descriptively for decisions under both risk and certainty, presumes concave ut...
This note emphasizes the special role of prospect theory in drawing psychophysical considerations i...
We study equilibrium trading strategies, market liquidity, and price efficiency in an economy in whi...
The most distinctive prediction of prospect theory is the fourfold pattern (FFP) of risk attitudes. ...
In many theories of decision under risk (e.g., expected utility theory, rank-dependent utility theor...
The workhorses of economic analysis are simple formal models that can explain naturally occurring ph...
This paper discusses human attitudes towards risk and the development of expected utility models, la...
One of the stylized facts underlying prospect theory is a four-fold pattern of risk preferences. Peo...
Previous studies on loss aversion have shown mixed results for small stakes decisions. This thesis p...
Shortcomings revealed by experimental and theoretical researchers such as Allais (1953), Rabin (2000...
How can people's risk preferences be understood? Work from prospect theory (Kahneman & Tversky, 1979...
Extensive data has convincingly demonstrated that expected utility, the reigning economic theory of ...
A natural economic interpretation of Prospect Theory is that people have preferences that are risk s...
Exchange economies were created in which individuals faced losses. If people are risk seeking in th...
We study equilibrium trading strategies and market quality in an economy in which speculators displa...
Prospect theory, used descriptively for decisions under both risk and certainty, presumes concave ut...
This note emphasizes the special role of prospect theory in drawing psychophysical considerations i...
We study equilibrium trading strategies, market liquidity, and price efficiency in an economy in whi...
The most distinctive prediction of prospect theory is the fourfold pattern (FFP) of risk attitudes. ...
In many theories of decision under risk (e.g., expected utility theory, rank-dependent utility theor...
The workhorses of economic analysis are simple formal models that can explain naturally occurring ph...
This paper discusses human attitudes towards risk and the development of expected utility models, la...
One of the stylized facts underlying prospect theory is a four-fold pattern of risk preferences. Peo...
Previous studies on loss aversion have shown mixed results for small stakes decisions. This thesis p...
Shortcomings revealed by experimental and theoretical researchers such as Allais (1953), Rabin (2000...
How can people's risk preferences be understood? Work from prospect theory (Kahneman & Tversky, 1979...
Extensive data has convincingly demonstrated that expected utility, the reigning economic theory of ...