How do individuals value noisy information that guides economic decisions? In our laboratory experiment, we find that individuals underreact to increasing the informativeness of a signal, thus undervalue high-quality information, and that they disproportionately prefer information that may yield certainty. Both biases are entirely due to non-standard belief updating, rather than due to non-standard risk preferences. We find that individuals differ consistently in their responsiveness to information - the extent that their beliefs move upon observing signals. Individual parameters of responsiveness to information have out-of-sample explanatory power in two distinct choice environments and are unrelated to proxies for mathematical aptitude
We use a simple version of the Psychological Expected Utility Model (Caplin and Leahy, QJE, 2001) to...
This paper examines the occurrence and fragility of information cascades in laboratory experiments. ...
The well-being of agents is often directly affected by their beliefs, in the form of anticipatory fe...
The supposed irrelevance of historical costs for rational decision making has been the subject of mu...
We conduct a series of experiments that simulate trading in financial markets. We find that the info...
Funding agency: Russell Sage FoundationBayesian updating remains the benchmark for dynamic modeling ...
International audienceWe conduct a series of experiments that simulate trading in financial markets....
The supposed irrelevance of historical costs for rational decision making has been the subject of mu...
International audienceWe conduct an experiment on individual choice under risk in which we study bel...
textabstractThe supposed irrelevance of historical costs for rational decision making has been the s...
This paper presents experimental evidence that when individuals are about to make a given decision u...
This paper presents experimental evidence that when individuals are about to make a given decision u...
We use a simple version of the Psychological Expected Utility Model (Caplin and Leahy, QJE, 2001) to...
People’s desire to seek or avoid information is not only influenced by the possible outcomes of an e...
We conduct a series of experiments that simulate trading in financial markets and which allows us to...
We use a simple version of the Psychological Expected Utility Model (Caplin and Leahy, QJE, 2001) to...
This paper examines the occurrence and fragility of information cascades in laboratory experiments. ...
The well-being of agents is often directly affected by their beliefs, in the form of anticipatory fe...
The supposed irrelevance of historical costs for rational decision making has been the subject of mu...
We conduct a series of experiments that simulate trading in financial markets. We find that the info...
Funding agency: Russell Sage FoundationBayesian updating remains the benchmark for dynamic modeling ...
International audienceWe conduct a series of experiments that simulate trading in financial markets....
The supposed irrelevance of historical costs for rational decision making has been the subject of mu...
International audienceWe conduct an experiment on individual choice under risk in which we study bel...
textabstractThe supposed irrelevance of historical costs for rational decision making has been the s...
This paper presents experimental evidence that when individuals are about to make a given decision u...
This paper presents experimental evidence that when individuals are about to make a given decision u...
We use a simple version of the Psychological Expected Utility Model (Caplin and Leahy, QJE, 2001) to...
People’s desire to seek or avoid information is not only influenced by the possible outcomes of an e...
We conduct a series of experiments that simulate trading in financial markets and which allows us to...
We use a simple version of the Psychological Expected Utility Model (Caplin and Leahy, QJE, 2001) to...
This paper examines the occurrence and fragility of information cascades in laboratory experiments. ...
The well-being of agents is often directly affected by their beliefs, in the form of anticipatory fe...