The St.~Petersburg Paradox is a famous economic and philosophical puzzle that has generated numerous conflicting explanations. To shed empirical light on this phenomenon, we examined subjects' bids for one St.~Petersburg gamble with a real monetary payment. We found that bids were typically lower than twice the smallest payoff, and thus much lower than is generally supposed. We also examined bids offered for several hypothetical variants of the St.~Petersburg Paradox. We found that bids were weakly affected by truncating the gamble, were strongly affected by repeats of the gamble, and depended linearly on the initial ``seed'' value of the gamble. One explanation, which we call the extit{median} extit{heuristic}, strongly predicts these data...
Nicolas Bernoulli suggested the St Petersburg game, nearly 300 years ago, which is widely believed t...
In An Introduction to Probability Theory and its Applications, W. Feller established a way of ending...
Abstract: The Petersburg paradox has led to much thought for three centuries. This paper describes t...
Expected value theory has been known for centuries to be subject to critique by St. Petersburg parad...
Expected value theory has been known for centuries to be subject to critique by St. Petersburg parad...
Abstract The St. Petersburg paradox is one of the oldest challenges of expected value theory. Thus f...
Abstract. The paradox of the St. Petersburg game is one of the oldest classical problems in probabil...
The classical St. Petersburg Paradox is discussed in terms of doubling strategies. It is claimed tha...
The St. Petersburg game is a probabilistic thought experiment. It describes a game which seems to ha...
The St. Petersburg paradox refers to a gamble of infinite expected value, where people are likely to...
<p>An examination of the St. Peterburg's Paradox, and provides a Median-based alternative method fro...
Nover and Hájek (2004) suggested a variant of the St Petersburg game which they dubbed the Pasadena ...
The St. Petersburg is one of the oldest violations of expected utility theory. Thus far, explanation...
pre-printIn spite of its infinite expectation value, the St. Petersburg game is not only a gamble wi...
Reduction of compound lotteries is implicit both in the statement of the St. Petersburg Paradox and ...
Nicolas Bernoulli suggested the St Petersburg game, nearly 300 years ago, which is widely believed t...
In An Introduction to Probability Theory and its Applications, W. Feller established a way of ending...
Abstract: The Petersburg paradox has led to much thought for three centuries. This paper describes t...
Expected value theory has been known for centuries to be subject to critique by St. Petersburg parad...
Expected value theory has been known for centuries to be subject to critique by St. Petersburg parad...
Abstract The St. Petersburg paradox is one of the oldest challenges of expected value theory. Thus f...
Abstract. The paradox of the St. Petersburg game is one of the oldest classical problems in probabil...
The classical St. Petersburg Paradox is discussed in terms of doubling strategies. It is claimed tha...
The St. Petersburg game is a probabilistic thought experiment. It describes a game which seems to ha...
The St. Petersburg paradox refers to a gamble of infinite expected value, where people are likely to...
<p>An examination of the St. Peterburg's Paradox, and provides a Median-based alternative method fro...
Nover and Hájek (2004) suggested a variant of the St Petersburg game which they dubbed the Pasadena ...
The St. Petersburg is one of the oldest violations of expected utility theory. Thus far, explanation...
pre-printIn spite of its infinite expectation value, the St. Petersburg game is not only a gamble wi...
Reduction of compound lotteries is implicit both in the statement of the St. Petersburg Paradox and ...
Nicolas Bernoulli suggested the St Petersburg game, nearly 300 years ago, which is widely believed t...
In An Introduction to Probability Theory and its Applications, W. Feller established a way of ending...
Abstract: The Petersburg paradox has led to much thought for three centuries. This paper describes t...