The principle of loss aversion is thought to explain a wide range of anomalous phenomena involving tradeoffs between losses and gains. In this article, I show that the anomalies loss aversion was introduced to explain --- the risky bet premium, the endowment effect, and the status-quo bias --- are characterized not only by a loss/gain tradeoff, but by a tradeoff between the status-quo and change; and, that a propensity towards the status-quo in the latter tradeoff is sufficient to explain these phenomena. Moreover, I show that two basic psychological principles --- (1) that motives drive behavior; and (2) that preferences tend to be fuzzy and ill-defined --- imply the existence of a robust and fundamental propensity of this sort. Thus, a lo...
The risk premium is affected by loss aversion and probability distortions as well as utility curvatu...
"A Thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science P...
The "uneven route" accountpredicts how and why loss aversion appears in human behavior. Th...
The endowment effect, status quo bias, and loss aversion are robust and well documented results from...
The endowment effect, status quo bias, and loss aversion are robust and well documented results from...
This note emphasizes the special role of prospect theory in drawing psychophysical considerations i...
Loss aversion is traditionally defined in the context of lotteries over monetary payoffs. This paper...
Decision makers often reject mixed gambles offering equal probabilities of a larger gain and a small...
Previous studies of loss aversion in decisions under risk have led to mixed results. Losses appear t...
In 4 experiments, we tested this proposition by manipulating the range of gains and losses that indi...
Loss aversion, an important element in prospect theory, explains many types of psychological behavio...
Prospect Theory proposed that the (dis)utility of losses is always more than gains due to a phenomen...
One of the most robust empirical findings in the behavioral sciences is loss aversion—the finding th...
ABSTRACT—Loss aversion occurs because people expect losses to have greater hedonic impact than gains...
Previous studies on loss aversion have shown mixed results for small stakes decisions. This thesis p...
The risk premium is affected by loss aversion and probability distortions as well as utility curvatu...
"A Thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science P...
The "uneven route" accountpredicts how and why loss aversion appears in human behavior. Th...
The endowment effect, status quo bias, and loss aversion are robust and well documented results from...
The endowment effect, status quo bias, and loss aversion are robust and well documented results from...
This note emphasizes the special role of prospect theory in drawing psychophysical considerations i...
Loss aversion is traditionally defined in the context of lotteries over monetary payoffs. This paper...
Decision makers often reject mixed gambles offering equal probabilities of a larger gain and a small...
Previous studies of loss aversion in decisions under risk have led to mixed results. Losses appear t...
In 4 experiments, we tested this proposition by manipulating the range of gains and losses that indi...
Loss aversion, an important element in prospect theory, explains many types of psychological behavio...
Prospect Theory proposed that the (dis)utility of losses is always more than gains due to a phenomen...
One of the most robust empirical findings in the behavioral sciences is loss aversion—the finding th...
ABSTRACT—Loss aversion occurs because people expect losses to have greater hedonic impact than gains...
Previous studies on loss aversion have shown mixed results for small stakes decisions. This thesis p...
The risk premium is affected by loss aversion and probability distortions as well as utility curvatu...
"A Thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science P...
The "uneven route" accountpredicts how and why loss aversion appears in human behavior. Th...