Probability matching, also known as the “matching law” or Herrnstein’s Law, has long puzzled economists and psychologists because of its apparent inconsistency with basic self-interest. We conduct an experiment with real monetary payoffs in which each participant plays a computer game to guess the outcome of a binary lottery. In addition to finding strong evidence for probability matching, we document different tendencies towards randomization in different payoff environments—as predicted by models of the evolutionary origin of probability matching—after controlling for a wide range of demographic and socioeconomic variables. We also find several individual differences in the tendency to maximize or randomize, correlated with wealth and oth...
Individuals often repeatedly face a choice of whether to obey a particular legal rule. Conventional ...
Probability matching occurs when an action is chosen with a frequency equivalent to the probability ...
Contains fulltext : 170784.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Human interacti...
Contrary to the conventional assumption that individuals maximize payoffs, robust experimental studi...
Findings from two experiments indicate that probability matching in sequential choice arises from an...
In repeated games with Nash equilibria in mixed strategies, players optimize by playing randomly. Pl...
There has been a long-running debate over whether humans match or maximize when faced with different...
The experimental phenomenon known as ‘probability matching’ is often offered as evidence in support ...
Why do people gamble? A large body of research suggests that cognitive distortions play an important...
In life, people commonly face repeated decisions under risk or uncertainty. While normative economic...
Probability matching is the tendency to match choice probabilities to outcome probabilities in a bin...
Probability matching is the tendency to match choice probabilities to outcome probabilities in a bin...
Gaissmaier and Schooler (2008) [Gaissmaier, W., & Schooler, L. J. (2008). The smart potential behind...
Probability matching is a classic choice anomaly that has been studied extensively. While many appro...
Probability matching 2 Probability matching is a suboptimal behavior that often plagues human decisi...
Individuals often repeatedly face a choice of whether to obey a particular legal rule. Conventional ...
Probability matching occurs when an action is chosen with a frequency equivalent to the probability ...
Contains fulltext : 170784.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Human interacti...
Contrary to the conventional assumption that individuals maximize payoffs, robust experimental studi...
Findings from two experiments indicate that probability matching in sequential choice arises from an...
In repeated games with Nash equilibria in mixed strategies, players optimize by playing randomly. Pl...
There has been a long-running debate over whether humans match or maximize when faced with different...
The experimental phenomenon known as ‘probability matching’ is often offered as evidence in support ...
Why do people gamble? A large body of research suggests that cognitive distortions play an important...
In life, people commonly face repeated decisions under risk or uncertainty. While normative economic...
Probability matching is the tendency to match choice probabilities to outcome probabilities in a bin...
Probability matching is the tendency to match choice probabilities to outcome probabilities in a bin...
Gaissmaier and Schooler (2008) [Gaissmaier, W., & Schooler, L. J. (2008). The smart potential behind...
Probability matching is a classic choice anomaly that has been studied extensively. While many appro...
Probability matching 2 Probability matching is a suboptimal behavior that often plagues human decisi...
Individuals often repeatedly face a choice of whether to obey a particular legal rule. Conventional ...
Probability matching occurs when an action is chosen with a frequency equivalent to the probability ...
Contains fulltext : 170784.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Human interacti...