The majority consensus in the empirical literature is that probability weighting functions are typically inverse-S shaped, that is, people tend to overweight small and underweight large probabilities. A separate stream of literature has reported event-splitting effects (also called violations of coalescing) and shown that they can explain violations of expected utility. This leads to the questions whether (1) the observed shape of weighting functions is a mere consequence of the coalesced presentation and, more generally, whether (2) preference elicitation should rely on presenting lotteries in a canonical split form instead of the commonly used coalesced form. We analyze data from a binary choice experiment where all lottery pairs are pres...
We provide a revealed preference characterization of expected utility maximization in binary lotteri...
Consistent behaviours are a fundamental requirement of Expected Utility Theory (EUT). Individual’s d...
The descriptive power of expected utility has been challenged by behavioral evidence showing that pe...
The majority consensus in the empirical literature is that probability weighting functions are typic...
I present new estimates of the probability weighting functions found in rankdependent theories of ch...
Subjects judged the values of lotteries from 3 points of view: the highest price that a buyer should...
Stewart, Reimers and Harris (2015, SRH hereafter) demonstrated that shapes of utility and probabilit...
Stewart, Reimers and Harris (2015, SRH hereafter) demonstrated that shapes of utility and probabilit...
Empirical studies have shown that decision makers do not usually treat probabili-ties linearly. Inst...
An important reason why people violate expected utility theory is probability weighting. Previous st...
In this paper we propose the use of preferred outcome distributions as a new method to elicit indivi...
Contains fulltext : 95379.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)In this paper,...
The main question of the presented experiments has been whether the probability weighting function (...
When individuals choose among risky alternatives, the psychological weight attached to an outcome ma...
This paper proposes a new model that explains the violations of expected utility theory through the ...
We provide a revealed preference characterization of expected utility maximization in binary lotteri...
Consistent behaviours are a fundamental requirement of Expected Utility Theory (EUT). Individual’s d...
The descriptive power of expected utility has been challenged by behavioral evidence showing that pe...
The majority consensus in the empirical literature is that probability weighting functions are typic...
I present new estimates of the probability weighting functions found in rankdependent theories of ch...
Subjects judged the values of lotteries from 3 points of view: the highest price that a buyer should...
Stewart, Reimers and Harris (2015, SRH hereafter) demonstrated that shapes of utility and probabilit...
Stewart, Reimers and Harris (2015, SRH hereafter) demonstrated that shapes of utility and probabilit...
Empirical studies have shown that decision makers do not usually treat probabili-ties linearly. Inst...
An important reason why people violate expected utility theory is probability weighting. Previous st...
In this paper we propose the use of preferred outcome distributions as a new method to elicit indivi...
Contains fulltext : 95379.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)In this paper,...
The main question of the presented experiments has been whether the probability weighting function (...
When individuals choose among risky alternatives, the psychological weight attached to an outcome ma...
This paper proposes a new model that explains the violations of expected utility theory through the ...
We provide a revealed preference characterization of expected utility maximization in binary lotteri...
Consistent behaviours are a fundamental requirement of Expected Utility Theory (EUT). Individual’s d...
The descriptive power of expected utility has been challenged by behavioral evidence showing that pe...