International audienceWe conduct an experiment on individual choice under risk in which we study belief updating when an agent receives a signal that restricts the number of possible states of the world. Subjects observe a sample drawn from an urn and form initial beliefs about the urn's composition. We then elicit how beliefs are modified after subjects receive a signal that restricts the set of the possible urns from which the observed sample could have been drawn. We find that this type of signal increases the frequency of correct assessments and that prediction accuracy is higher for lower levels of risk. We also show that prediction accuracy is higher after invalidating signals (i.e. signals that contradict the initial belief). This pa...
In an experiment with more than 500 participants we study how past experience of uncertainty (imperf...
In an experiment with more than 500 participants we study how past experience of uncertainty (imperf...
How do individuals value noisy information that guides economic decisions? In our laboratory experim...
International audienceWe conduct an experiment on individual choice under risk in which we study bel...
International audienceWe conduct an experiment on individual choice under risk in which we study bel...
Working paper GATE 2010-33This article analyses belief updating when agents receive a signal that re...
Working paper GATE 2010-33This article analyses belief updating when agents receive a signal that re...
Working paper GATE 2010-33This article analyses belief updating when agents receive a signal that re...
Working paper GATE 2010-33This article analyses belief updating when agents receive a signal that re...
Working paper GATE 2010-33This article analyses belief updating when agents receive a signal that re...
We present an experiment where subjects sequentially receive signals about the true state of the wor...
International audienceWe conduct a series of experiments that simulate trading in financial markets....
International audienceWe conduct a series of experiments that simulate trading in financial markets....
In an experiment with more than 500 participants we study how past experience of uncertainty (imperf...
In an experiment with more than 500 participants we study how past experience of uncertainty (imperf...
In an experiment with more than 500 participants we study how past experience of uncertainty (imperf...
In an experiment with more than 500 participants we study how past experience of uncertainty (imperf...
How do individuals value noisy information that guides economic decisions? In our laboratory experim...
International audienceWe conduct an experiment on individual choice under risk in which we study bel...
International audienceWe conduct an experiment on individual choice under risk in which we study bel...
Working paper GATE 2010-33This article analyses belief updating when agents receive a signal that re...
Working paper GATE 2010-33This article analyses belief updating when agents receive a signal that re...
Working paper GATE 2010-33This article analyses belief updating when agents receive a signal that re...
Working paper GATE 2010-33This article analyses belief updating when agents receive a signal that re...
Working paper GATE 2010-33This article analyses belief updating when agents receive a signal that re...
We present an experiment where subjects sequentially receive signals about the true state of the wor...
International audienceWe conduct a series of experiments that simulate trading in financial markets....
International audienceWe conduct a series of experiments that simulate trading in financial markets....
In an experiment with more than 500 participants we study how past experience of uncertainty (imperf...
In an experiment with more than 500 participants we study how past experience of uncertainty (imperf...
In an experiment with more than 500 participants we study how past experience of uncertainty (imperf...
In an experiment with more than 500 participants we study how past experience of uncertainty (imperf...
How do individuals value noisy information that guides economic decisions? In our laboratory experim...