We study the two-color problem by Ellsberg (1961) with the modification that the decision maker draws twice with replacement and a different color wins in each draw. The 50-50 risky urn turns out to have the highest risk conceivable among all prospects including the ambiguous one, while all feasible color distributions are mean-preserving spreads to one another. We show that the well-known second-order sophisticated theories like MEU, CEU, and REU as well as Savage’s first-order theory of SEU share the same predictions in our design, for any first-order risk attitude. Yet, we observe that substantial numbers of subjects violate the theory predictions even in this simple design.Ellsberg paradox, Ambiguity, Second-order risk, Second-order pre...
Ambiguity aversion-the tendency to avoid options whose outcome probabilities are unknown-is a ubiqui...
We implement an experiment to elicit subjects’ ambiguity attitudes in the spirit of Ellsberg’s three...
We replicate the essentials of the Huettel et al. (2006) experiment on choice under uncertainty with...
We study the two-color problem by Ellsberg (1961) with the modification that the decision maker draw...
We present a simple model where preferences with complexity aversion, rather than ambiguity aversion...
In a version of the Ellsberg Paradox, the decision-maker is confronted with two urns, each containin...
As illustrated by the famous Ellsberg paradox, many subjects prefer to bet on events with known rath...
Experimental results on the Ellsberg paradox typically reveal behavior that is commonly interpreted ...
Traditionally, real experiments testing subjective expected utility theory take for granted that sub...
Experimental results on the Ellsberg paradox typically reveal behavior that is commonly interpreted ...
Experimental results on the Ellsberg paradox typically reveal behavior that is commonly interpreted ...
Ambiguity aversion has been used to explain a wide range of phenomena in law and policy: incomplete ...
We characterize, in the framework for variational preferences, the affective decision making model of...
We study elicitation of subjective beliefs of an agent facing ambiguity (model uncertainty): the age...
Ellsberg paradox in decision theory posits that people will inevitably choose a known probability of...
Ambiguity aversion-the tendency to avoid options whose outcome probabilities are unknown-is a ubiqui...
We implement an experiment to elicit subjects’ ambiguity attitudes in the spirit of Ellsberg’s three...
We replicate the essentials of the Huettel et al. (2006) experiment on choice under uncertainty with...
We study the two-color problem by Ellsberg (1961) with the modification that the decision maker draw...
We present a simple model where preferences with complexity aversion, rather than ambiguity aversion...
In a version of the Ellsberg Paradox, the decision-maker is confronted with two urns, each containin...
As illustrated by the famous Ellsberg paradox, many subjects prefer to bet on events with known rath...
Experimental results on the Ellsberg paradox typically reveal behavior that is commonly interpreted ...
Traditionally, real experiments testing subjective expected utility theory take for granted that sub...
Experimental results on the Ellsberg paradox typically reveal behavior that is commonly interpreted ...
Experimental results on the Ellsberg paradox typically reveal behavior that is commonly interpreted ...
Ambiguity aversion has been used to explain a wide range of phenomena in law and policy: incomplete ...
We characterize, in the framework for variational preferences, the affective decision making model of...
We study elicitation of subjective beliefs of an agent facing ambiguity (model uncertainty): the age...
Ellsberg paradox in decision theory posits that people will inevitably choose a known probability of...
Ambiguity aversion-the tendency to avoid options whose outcome probabilities are unknown-is a ubiqui...
We implement an experiment to elicit subjects’ ambiguity attitudes in the spirit of Ellsberg’s three...
We replicate the essentials of the Huettel et al. (2006) experiment on choice under uncertainty with...