This paper proposes a quantitative modification of standard utility elicitation procedures, such as the probability and certainty equivalence methods, to correct for commonly observed violations of expected utility. Traditionally, decision analysis assumes expected utility not only for the prescriptive purpose of calculating optimal decisions but also for the descriptive purpose of eliciting utilities. However, descriptive violations of expected utility bias utility elicitations. That such biases are effective became clear when systematic discrepancies were found between different utility elicitation methods that, under expected utility, should have yielded identical utilities. As it is not clear how to correct for these biases without furt...
Expected utility theory is widely used to formally model decisions in situations where outcomes are ...
Expected utility theory is widely used to formally model decisions in situations where outcomes are ...
Most health care evaluations today still assume expected utility even though the descriptive deficie...
This paper proposes a quantitative modification of standard utility elicitation procedures, such as ...
This paper proposes a quantitative modification of standard utility elicitation procedures, such as ...
This paper proposes a quantitative modification of standard utility elicitation procedures, such as ...
This paper proposes a quantitative modification of standard utility elicitation procedures, such as ...
This paper proposes a quantitative modification of standard utility elicitation procedures, such as ...
This paper proposes a quantitative modification of standard utility elicitation procedures, such as ...
This paper explores biases in the elicitation of utilities under risk and the contribution that gene...
This paper explores biases in the elicitation of utilities under risk and the contribution that gene...
This paper provides an efficient method to measure utility under prospect theory, the most importan...
textabstractThis paper proposes a new method, the (gamble-)tradeoff method, for eliciting utilities ...
This paper explores biases in the elicitation of utilities under risk and the contribution that gene...
This paper proposes a new method, the (gamble-)tradeoff method, for eliciting utilities in decision ...
Expected utility theory is widely used to formally model decisions in situations where outcomes are ...
Expected utility theory is widely used to formally model decisions in situations where outcomes are ...
Most health care evaluations today still assume expected utility even though the descriptive deficie...
This paper proposes a quantitative modification of standard utility elicitation procedures, such as ...
This paper proposes a quantitative modification of standard utility elicitation procedures, such as ...
This paper proposes a quantitative modification of standard utility elicitation procedures, such as ...
This paper proposes a quantitative modification of standard utility elicitation procedures, such as ...
This paper proposes a quantitative modification of standard utility elicitation procedures, such as ...
This paper proposes a quantitative modification of standard utility elicitation procedures, such as ...
This paper explores biases in the elicitation of utilities under risk and the contribution that gene...
This paper explores biases in the elicitation of utilities under risk and the contribution that gene...
This paper provides an efficient method to measure utility under prospect theory, the most importan...
textabstractThis paper proposes a new method, the (gamble-)tradeoff method, for eliciting utilities ...
This paper explores biases in the elicitation of utilities under risk and the contribution that gene...
This paper proposes a new method, the (gamble-)tradeoff method, for eliciting utilities in decision ...
Expected utility theory is widely used to formally model decisions in situations where outcomes are ...
Expected utility theory is widely used to formally model decisions in situations where outcomes are ...
Most health care evaluations today still assume expected utility even though the descriptive deficie...