Imagine that you own a five-outcome gamble with the following payoffs and probabilities: ($100, .20; $50, .20; $0, .20; −$25, .20; −$50, .20). What happens when the opportunity to improve such a gamble is provided by a manipulation that adds value to one outcome versus another outcome, particularly when the opportunity to add value to one outcome versus another outcome changes the overall probability of a gain or the overall probability of a loss? Such a choice provides a simple test of the expected utility model (EU), original prospect theory (OPT), and cumulative prospect theory (CPT). A study of risky choices involving 375 respondents indicates that respondents were most sensitive to changes in outcome values that either increased the ov...
Whilst Cumulative Prospect theory (CPT) provides an explanation of gambling on longshots at actuaria...
Prospect theory, used descriptively for decisions under both risk and certainty, presumes concave ut...
Risk and reward are negatively correlated in a wide variety of environments, and in many cases this ...
Imagine that you own a five-outcome gamble with the following payoffs and probabilities: ($100,.20; ...
In a series of experiments, we provide evidence that people pay special attention to the probability...
Prominent decision-making theories propose that individuals (should) evaluate alternatives by combin...
In four experiments we studied precautionary decisions where participants decided whether or not to ...
The appeal of expected utility theory as a basis for a descriptive model of risky decision making ha...
Gambling decisions are inherently risky decisions involving wins and losses. The severity of gamblin...
Abstract We investigate a basic premise of prospect theory, that the valuation of gains and losses i...
Previous studies of loss aversion in decisions under risk have led to mixed results. Losses appear t...
Previous studies on loss aversion have shown mixed results for small stakes decisions. This thesis p...
Prominent decision-making theories propose that individuals (should) evaluate alternatives by combin...
There are two means of changing the expected value of a risk: changing the probability of a reward o...
Prospect theory (PT) is the dominant descriptive theory of decision making under risk today. For the...
Whilst Cumulative Prospect theory (CPT) provides an explanation of gambling on longshots at actuaria...
Prospect theory, used descriptively for decisions under both risk and certainty, presumes concave ut...
Risk and reward are negatively correlated in a wide variety of environments, and in many cases this ...
Imagine that you own a five-outcome gamble with the following payoffs and probabilities: ($100,.20; ...
In a series of experiments, we provide evidence that people pay special attention to the probability...
Prominent decision-making theories propose that individuals (should) evaluate alternatives by combin...
In four experiments we studied precautionary decisions where participants decided whether or not to ...
The appeal of expected utility theory as a basis for a descriptive model of risky decision making ha...
Gambling decisions are inherently risky decisions involving wins and losses. The severity of gamblin...
Abstract We investigate a basic premise of prospect theory, that the valuation of gains and losses i...
Previous studies of loss aversion in decisions under risk have led to mixed results. Losses appear t...
Previous studies on loss aversion have shown mixed results for small stakes decisions. This thesis p...
Prominent decision-making theories propose that individuals (should) evaluate alternatives by combin...
There are two means of changing the expected value of a risk: changing the probability of a reward o...
Prospect theory (PT) is the dominant descriptive theory of decision making under risk today. For the...
Whilst Cumulative Prospect theory (CPT) provides an explanation of gambling on longshots at actuaria...
Prospect theory, used descriptively for decisions under both risk and certainty, presumes concave ut...
Risk and reward are negatively correlated in a wide variety of environments, and in many cases this ...