This paper offers a simple but powerful model of wishful thinking, cognitive dissonance, and related biases. Choices maximize subjective expected utility, but beliefs depend on the decision maker's interests as well as on relevant information. Simplifying assumptions yield a representation in which the payoff in an event affects beliefs as if it were part of the evidence about its likelihood. A single parameter determines both the direction and weight of this `evidence', with positive values corresponding to optimism and negative values to pessimism. Changes to a person's interests amount to new `evidence', and can alter beliefs even in the absence of new information. The magnitude of the bias increases with the degree of uncertainty and th...
People tend towards wishful thinking, in which they overesti-mate the probability of favorable outco...
This paper develops a model of reference-dependent assessment of subjective beliefs in which loss-av...
none2siWishful thinking, dened as the tendency to over-estimate the probability of high-payoff outco...
In standard decision theory, rational agents are objective, keeping their beliefs independent from t...
People are confronted with situations where they have to make choices and judgments every day. In ma...
Psychologists have documented a panoply of beliefs that are sufficiently skewed towards desirability...
This paper introduces a model of Bayesian decision making where a person’s beliefs about the likelih...
The notion that desire for an outcome inflates optimism about that outcome has been dubbed the desir...
People’s preferences for an outcome can influence how they perceive the likelihood of that outcome o...
Optimistic beliefs affect important areas of economic decision making, yet direct knowledge on how b...
Optimistic beliefs affect important areas of economic decision making, yet direct knowledge on how b...
People appear to be unrealistically optimistic about their future prospects, as reflected by theory ...
Wishful thinking, dened as the tendency to over-estimate the probability of high-payoff outcomes, is...
This thesis studies decision making under uncertainty and how economic agents respond to information...
Wishful thinking, dened as the tendency to over-estimate the probability of high-payoff outcomes, is...
People tend towards wishful thinking, in which they overesti-mate the probability of favorable outco...
This paper develops a model of reference-dependent assessment of subjective beliefs in which loss-av...
none2siWishful thinking, dened as the tendency to over-estimate the probability of high-payoff outco...
In standard decision theory, rational agents are objective, keeping their beliefs independent from t...
People are confronted with situations where they have to make choices and judgments every day. In ma...
Psychologists have documented a panoply of beliefs that are sufficiently skewed towards desirability...
This paper introduces a model of Bayesian decision making where a person’s beliefs about the likelih...
The notion that desire for an outcome inflates optimism about that outcome has been dubbed the desir...
People’s preferences for an outcome can influence how they perceive the likelihood of that outcome o...
Optimistic beliefs affect important areas of economic decision making, yet direct knowledge on how b...
Optimistic beliefs affect important areas of economic decision making, yet direct knowledge on how b...
People appear to be unrealistically optimistic about their future prospects, as reflected by theory ...
Wishful thinking, dened as the tendency to over-estimate the probability of high-payoff outcomes, is...
This thesis studies decision making under uncertainty and how economic agents respond to information...
Wishful thinking, dened as the tendency to over-estimate the probability of high-payoff outcomes, is...
People tend towards wishful thinking, in which they overesti-mate the probability of favorable outco...
This paper develops a model of reference-dependent assessment of subjective beliefs in which loss-av...
none2siWishful thinking, dened as the tendency to over-estimate the probability of high-payoff outco...