This paper identifies convex distributional preferences as a possible cause for the empirical observation that agents belonging to the same group tend to behave similarly in risky environments. We first show theoretically that convex distributional preferences imply social interaction effects in risky choices in the sense that observing a peer choose a risky (safe) option increases the agents incentive to choose the risky (safe) option as well, even when lotteries are stochastically independent and the agent can only observe the lottery chosen by the peer but not the corresponding outcome. We then confirm our theoretical predictions experimentally.(VLID)4655672Version of recor
This paper analyzes which type of intrinsic preferences drive an agent’s behavior in a sequential pu...
Theories (and experiments) on decision making under risk typically ignore (and exclude) a social con...
By means of a laboratory experiment we investigate the role of risk preferences for prosocial behavi...
Extensive field evidence shows individuals' decisions in settings involving uncertainty depend on th...
Abstract: Extensive field evidence shows individuals ’ decisions in settings involving choice under...
Abstract: Extensive field evidence shows individuals ’ decisions in settings involving choice under...
This paper examines the e↵ect of peers on individual risk taking. In the absence of informational mo...
Are people’s risk preferences influenced by the preferences of others they interact with or observe?...
abstract: Economists, political philosophers, and others have often characterized social preferences...
We explore how risk preferences affect pro-social behavior in risky environments. We analyze a modif...
Social preference models were originally constructed to explain why people spend money to affect the...
Social preference models were originally constructed to explain why people spend money to affect the...
Often in cooperative situations, many aspects of the decision-making environment are uncertain. We i...
Often in cooperative situations, many aspects of the decision-making environment are uncertain. We i...
International audienceDecisions under risk are often embedded in a social context that we usually ab...
This paper analyzes which type of intrinsic preferences drive an agent’s behavior in a sequential pu...
Theories (and experiments) on decision making under risk typically ignore (and exclude) a social con...
By means of a laboratory experiment we investigate the role of risk preferences for prosocial behavi...
Extensive field evidence shows individuals' decisions in settings involving uncertainty depend on th...
Abstract: Extensive field evidence shows individuals ’ decisions in settings involving choice under...
Abstract: Extensive field evidence shows individuals ’ decisions in settings involving choice under...
This paper examines the e↵ect of peers on individual risk taking. In the absence of informational mo...
Are people’s risk preferences influenced by the preferences of others they interact with or observe?...
abstract: Economists, political philosophers, and others have often characterized social preferences...
We explore how risk preferences affect pro-social behavior in risky environments. We analyze a modif...
Social preference models were originally constructed to explain why people spend money to affect the...
Social preference models were originally constructed to explain why people spend money to affect the...
Often in cooperative situations, many aspects of the decision-making environment are uncertain. We i...
Often in cooperative situations, many aspects of the decision-making environment are uncertain. We i...
International audienceDecisions under risk are often embedded in a social context that we usually ab...
This paper analyzes which type of intrinsic preferences drive an agent’s behavior in a sequential pu...
Theories (and experiments) on decision making under risk typically ignore (and exclude) a social con...
By means of a laboratory experiment we investigate the role of risk preferences for prosocial behavi...