We model the choice behaviour of an agent who suffers from imperfect attention. We define inattention axiomatically through preference over menus and endowed alternatives: an agent is inattentive if it is better to be endowed with an alternative a than to be allowed to pick a from a menu in which a is is the best alternative. This property and vNM rationality on the domain of menus and alternatives imply that the agent notices each alternative with a given menu-dependent probability (attention parameter) and maximises a menu independent utility function over the alternatives he notices. Preference for flexibility restricts the model to menu independent attention parameters as in Manzini and Mariotti [19]. Our theory explains anomalies (e...
In rational choice theory, individuals are assumed always to choose the option that will provide the...
This dissertation consists of three essays studying economic agents with non-standard reactions to i...
The standard revealed preference argument relies on an implicit assumption that a decision maker con...
We model a boundedly rational agent who suffers from limited attention. The agent considers each fe...
We model a boundedly rational agent who suffers from limited attention. The agent considers each fea...
This paper models an agent who has a limited capacity to pay attention to information and thus condi...
This paper studies how an optimal menu chosen by a social planner depends on whether agents receive ...
We study preferences over menus of acts and provide axiomatic foundations for a model of rational in...
An observer wants to understand a decision-maker's welfare from her choice. She believes that decisi...
One potentially important drawback of existing theories of limited attention is that they typically ...
The class of preferences over opportunity sets ("menus") rationalizable by underlying preferences ov...
We study the impact of manipulating the attention of a decision-maker who learns sequentially about ...
Models of rational inattention allow agents to make mistakes in their actions while assuming they do...
Recent results showed that taking into account attention to attributes in random utility models lead...
We show in a theoretical model that benefits of allocating additional attention to evaluating the ma...
In rational choice theory, individuals are assumed always to choose the option that will provide the...
This dissertation consists of three essays studying economic agents with non-standard reactions to i...
The standard revealed preference argument relies on an implicit assumption that a decision maker con...
We model a boundedly rational agent who suffers from limited attention. The agent considers each fe...
We model a boundedly rational agent who suffers from limited attention. The agent considers each fea...
This paper models an agent who has a limited capacity to pay attention to information and thus condi...
This paper studies how an optimal menu chosen by a social planner depends on whether agents receive ...
We study preferences over menus of acts and provide axiomatic foundations for a model of rational in...
An observer wants to understand a decision-maker's welfare from her choice. She believes that decisi...
One potentially important drawback of existing theories of limited attention is that they typically ...
The class of preferences over opportunity sets ("menus") rationalizable by underlying preferences ov...
We study the impact of manipulating the attention of a decision-maker who learns sequentially about ...
Models of rational inattention allow agents to make mistakes in their actions while assuming they do...
Recent results showed that taking into account attention to attributes in random utility models lead...
We show in a theoretical model that benefits of allocating additional attention to evaluating the ma...
In rational choice theory, individuals are assumed always to choose the option that will provide the...
This dissertation consists of three essays studying economic agents with non-standard reactions to i...
The standard revealed preference argument relies on an implicit assumption that a decision maker con...