We consider a market economy where two rational agents are able to learn the distribution of future events. In this context, we study whether moving away from the standard Bayesian belief updating, in the sense of under-reaction to some degree to new information, may be strategically convenient for traders. We show that, in equilibrium, strong under-reaction occurs, thus rational agents may strategically want to bias their learning process. Our analysis points out that the underlying mechanism driving ex-ante strategical decisions is diversity seeking. Finally, we show that, even if robust with respect to strategy selection, strong under-reaction can generate low realized welfare levels because of a long transient phase in which the agent ...
This paper analyzes how asset prices in a binary market react to information when traders have heter...
This article studies situations in which agents do not initially know the effect of their decisions,...
Learning processes are widely held to be the mechanism by which boundedly rational agents adapt to e...
We consider a market economy where two rational agents are able to learn the distribution of future ...
This paper examines the heterogeneous market in which economic agents of different information-proce...
Under-reaction is a robust response to model misspecification rewarded by financial markets, rather ...
We consider strategic players who may have a misspecified view about the world, and investigate thei...
It has long been recognized that agents\u27 expectations, in many instances, have a major impact on ...
We focus on learning during development in a group of individuals that play a competitive game with ...
This chapter reviews some work on bounded rationality, expectation formation and learning in complex...
Behavioral economics provides several motivations for the common observation that agents appear some...
In this paper we apply a learning model from machine learning, to a human trading crowd to understan...
Traders pay attention to one another but are unable to perfectly deduce each others’ beliefs from tr...
Behavioral economics provides several motivations for the common observation that agents appear some...
Nash equilibrium takes optimization as a primitive, but suboptimal behavior can persist in simple st...
This paper analyzes how asset prices in a binary market react to information when traders have heter...
This article studies situations in which agents do not initially know the effect of their decisions,...
Learning processes are widely held to be the mechanism by which boundedly rational agents adapt to e...
We consider a market economy where two rational agents are able to learn the distribution of future ...
This paper examines the heterogeneous market in which economic agents of different information-proce...
Under-reaction is a robust response to model misspecification rewarded by financial markets, rather ...
We consider strategic players who may have a misspecified view about the world, and investigate thei...
It has long been recognized that agents\u27 expectations, in many instances, have a major impact on ...
We focus on learning during development in a group of individuals that play a competitive game with ...
This chapter reviews some work on bounded rationality, expectation formation and learning in complex...
Behavioral economics provides several motivations for the common observation that agents appear some...
In this paper we apply a learning model from machine learning, to a human trading crowd to understan...
Traders pay attention to one another but are unable to perfectly deduce each others’ beliefs from tr...
Behavioral economics provides several motivations for the common observation that agents appear some...
Nash equilibrium takes optimization as a primitive, but suboptimal behavior can persist in simple st...
This paper analyzes how asset prices in a binary market react to information when traders have heter...
This article studies situations in which agents do not initially know the effect of their decisions,...
Learning processes are widely held to be the mechanism by which boundedly rational agents adapt to e...