We design an experiment to test the hypothesis that, in violation of Bayes’ rule, some people respond more forcefully to the strength of information than to its weight. We provide incentives to motivate effort, use naturally occurring information, and control for risk attitude. We find that the strength–weight bias affects expectations but that its magnitude is significantly lower than originally reported. Controls for nonlinear utility further reduce the bias. Our results suggest that incentive compatibility and controls for risk attitude considerably affect inferences on errors in expectations
The results of an asset market experiment, in which 64 subjects trade two assets on eight markets in...
We report a controlled laboratory experiment examining risk-taking and information aggregation in gr...
We conduct prediction experiments where subjects estimate, and later reconstruct probabilities of up...
We design an experiment to test the hypothesis that, in violation of Bayes Rule, some people respond...
We design an experiment to test the hypothesis that, in violation of Bayes’ rule, some people respon...
We test whether the rejections of the expectations hypothesis can be explained by two behavioral bia...
We perform an experiment designed to assess the accuracy of beliefs about characteristics and decisi...
Subjects who overestimate their performance in experimental tasks unrelated to travel are less willi...
Evidence of risk aversion in laboratory settings over small stakes leads to a priori implausible lev...
Optimistic beliefs affect important areas of economic decision making, yet direct knowledge on how b...
In this paper we argue that valuable information can be conveyed by looking at data coming from the ...
We examine whether finance professionals deviate from Bayes’ theorem on the processing of nondiagn...
Why would people pay more for a $50 gift certificate than for the opportunity to receive a gift cert...
An experiment is reported which tests for positive confirmation bias in a setting in which individua...
Information provision experiments allow researchers to test economic theories and answer policy-rele...
The results of an asset market experiment, in which 64 subjects trade two assets on eight markets in...
We report a controlled laboratory experiment examining risk-taking and information aggregation in gr...
We conduct prediction experiments where subjects estimate, and later reconstruct probabilities of up...
We design an experiment to test the hypothesis that, in violation of Bayes Rule, some people respond...
We design an experiment to test the hypothesis that, in violation of Bayes’ rule, some people respon...
We test whether the rejections of the expectations hypothesis can be explained by two behavioral bia...
We perform an experiment designed to assess the accuracy of beliefs about characteristics and decisi...
Subjects who overestimate their performance in experimental tasks unrelated to travel are less willi...
Evidence of risk aversion in laboratory settings over small stakes leads to a priori implausible lev...
Optimistic beliefs affect important areas of economic decision making, yet direct knowledge on how b...
In this paper we argue that valuable information can be conveyed by looking at data coming from the ...
We examine whether finance professionals deviate from Bayes’ theorem on the processing of nondiagn...
Why would people pay more for a $50 gift certificate than for the opportunity to receive a gift cert...
An experiment is reported which tests for positive confirmation bias in a setting in which individua...
Information provision experiments allow researchers to test economic theories and answer policy-rele...
The results of an asset market experiment, in which 64 subjects trade two assets on eight markets in...
We report a controlled laboratory experiment examining risk-taking and information aggregation in gr...
We conduct prediction experiments where subjects estimate, and later reconstruct probabilities of up...