Different agents need to make a prediction. They observe identical data, but have different models: they predict using different explanatory variables. We study which agent believes they have the best predictive ability -- as measured by the smallest subjective posterior mean squared prediction error -- and show how it depends on the sample size. With small samples, we present results suggesting it is an agent using a low-dimensional model. With large samples, it is generally an agent with a high-dimensional model, possibly including irrelevant variables, but never excluding relevant ones. We apply our results to characterize the winning model in an auction of productive assets, to argue that entrepreneurs and investors with simple models w...
We present a model of investors acquiring forecasts from a group of investment analysts. Investors ...
We present a model of investors acquiring forecasts from a group of investment analysts. Investors ...
Standard methods to assess the statistical quality of econometric models implicitly assume there is ...
[[abstract]]In this article, we extend an early agent-based spatial model of the prediction market b...
In this article, we extend an early agent-based spatial model of the prediction market by taking int...
Conventional wisdom usually suggests that agents should use all the data they have to make the best ...
In this dissertation, I look at four distinct systems that all embody a similar challenge to modelin...
A "statistician" takes an action on behalf of an agent, based on the agent's self-reported personal ...
The aim of this paper is to investigate how different degrees of sophistication in agents' behaviora...
The aim of this paper is to investigate how different degrees of sophistication in agents’ behaviora...
This paper aims to show that the market selection hypothesis in finance is not solely driven by the ...
Modern investors face a high-dimensional prediction problem: thousands of observable variables are p...
In a standard General Equilibrium framework, we consider an agent strategically using her large volu...
We study a portfolio selection problem where a player attempts to maximise a utility function that r...
We present a model of investors acquiring forecasts from a group of investment analysts. Investors ...
We present a model of investors acquiring forecasts from a group of investment analysts. Investors ...
Standard methods to assess the statistical quality of econometric models implicitly assume there is ...
[[abstract]]In this article, we extend an early agent-based spatial model of the prediction market b...
In this article, we extend an early agent-based spatial model of the prediction market by taking int...
Conventional wisdom usually suggests that agents should use all the data they have to make the best ...
In this dissertation, I look at four distinct systems that all embody a similar challenge to modelin...
A "statistician" takes an action on behalf of an agent, based on the agent's self-reported personal ...
The aim of this paper is to investigate how different degrees of sophistication in agents' behaviora...
The aim of this paper is to investigate how different degrees of sophistication in agents’ behaviora...
This paper aims to show that the market selection hypothesis in finance is not solely driven by the ...
Modern investors face a high-dimensional prediction problem: thousands of observable variables are p...
In a standard General Equilibrium framework, we consider an agent strategically using her large volu...
We study a portfolio selection problem where a player attempts to maximise a utility function that r...
We present a model of investors acquiring forecasts from a group of investment analysts. Investors ...
We present a model of investors acquiring forecasts from a group of investment analysts. Investors ...
Standard methods to assess the statistical quality of econometric models implicitly assume there is ...