In economic analyses of asymmetric information, better-informed agents are assumed capable of reproducing the judgments of less-informed agents. We discuss a systematic violation of this assumption that we call the "curse of knowledge." Better-informed agents are unable to ignore private information even when it is in their interest to do so; more information is not always better. Comparing judgments made in individual-level and market experiments, we find that market forces reduce the curse by approximately 50 percent but do not eliminate it. Implications for bargaining, strategic behavior by firms, principal-agent problems, and choice under uncertainty are discussed
Economic theory predicts that in a first-price auction with equal and observable valuations, bidders...
International audienceWe show that a monopolist's profit is higher if he refrains from collecting co...
Managers often employ market response models as decision aids and historical information of competit...
In economic analyses of asymmetric information, better-informed agents are assumed capable of reprod...
In economic analyses of asymmetric information, better-informed agents are assumed capable of reprod...
Abstract Traditional economic and decision-making models allow for "free disposal" of info...
This research investigates the impact of reporting different kinds of trade information to buyers an...
The psychology literature provides ample evidence that people have difficulties taking the perspecti...
Chapter one introduces the thesis, and the relationships between the different chapters. The second ...
Economic models typically allow for “free disposal†or “reversibility†of information, which i...
The current doctoral thesis is comprised of three distinct papers with a unifying theme of studying ...
and in market settings. We consider three experimental treatments, one with inequality, one with ine...
There is evidence that people do not fully take into account how other people’s actions are continge...
Traditional economic and decision-making models allow for “free disposal ” of information, meaning t...
The article first examines into a situation in which the seller of a product have better information...
Economic theory predicts that in a first-price auction with equal and observable valuations, bidders...
International audienceWe show that a monopolist's profit is higher if he refrains from collecting co...
Managers often employ market response models as decision aids and historical information of competit...
In economic analyses of asymmetric information, better-informed agents are assumed capable of reprod...
In economic analyses of asymmetric information, better-informed agents are assumed capable of reprod...
Abstract Traditional economic and decision-making models allow for "free disposal" of info...
This research investigates the impact of reporting different kinds of trade information to buyers an...
The psychology literature provides ample evidence that people have difficulties taking the perspecti...
Chapter one introduces the thesis, and the relationships between the different chapters. The second ...
Economic models typically allow for “free disposal†or “reversibility†of information, which i...
The current doctoral thesis is comprised of three distinct papers with a unifying theme of studying ...
and in market settings. We consider three experimental treatments, one with inequality, one with ine...
There is evidence that people do not fully take into account how other people’s actions are continge...
Traditional economic and decision-making models allow for “free disposal ” of information, meaning t...
The article first examines into a situation in which the seller of a product have better information...
Economic theory predicts that in a first-price auction with equal and observable valuations, bidders...
International audienceWe show that a monopolist's profit is higher if he refrains from collecting co...
Managers often employ market response models as decision aids and historical information of competit...