I provide a test of narrow framing to explain why individuals turn down small positive expected value lotteries. Participants in a large survey have been asked whether they would accept a small lottery of winning 180 euros with probability of 1/2 or losing 100 euros with the same probability. To half of the sample, randomly selected, the lottery question was asked at the beginning of the interview; the other half made the decision immediately after they were asked to think about and report their subjec- tive probability distribution of future earnings. Consistent with narrow framing, I find that individuals that were induced to bring their earnings risk to mind before facing the decision are significantly less likely to turn it down. Furthe...
Varying several parameters of single-stage lottery choice tasks we investigate the question which fe...
The authors show, with real and hypothetical payoffs, that consumers are willing to pay substantial...
Consistent behaviours are a fundamental requirement of Expected Utility Theory (EUT). Individual’s d...
International audienceWe present a new experimental evidence of how framing affects decisions in the...
Background: Decisions made on behalf of other people are sometimes more rational than those made for...
Framing effect, which refers to preference reversal due to different descriptions of the same outcom...
We know a great deal about risk seeking and risk aversive behaviour in making decisions for yourself...
Background: Decisions made on behalf of other people are sometimes more rational than those made for...
We study the following basic intuition: when faced with a decision how to split their investment bet...
Framing effects play an important role in individual decision-making under risk. This investigation ...
The representativeness heuristic (RH) has been proposed to be at the root of several types of biases...
The authors show, with real and hypothetical payoffs, that consumers are willing to pay substantiall...
People make hundreds of decisions every day, and very little is known about how they do this. A big ...
[[abstract]]We document support for the narrow framing effect proposed by Tversky, A. and Kahneman, ...
Experiences form part and parcel of life. As suggested by existing literature, past experiences may ...
Varying several parameters of single-stage lottery choice tasks we investigate the question which fe...
The authors show, with real and hypothetical payoffs, that consumers are willing to pay substantial...
Consistent behaviours are a fundamental requirement of Expected Utility Theory (EUT). Individual’s d...
International audienceWe present a new experimental evidence of how framing affects decisions in the...
Background: Decisions made on behalf of other people are sometimes more rational than those made for...
Framing effect, which refers to preference reversal due to different descriptions of the same outcom...
We know a great deal about risk seeking and risk aversive behaviour in making decisions for yourself...
Background: Decisions made on behalf of other people are sometimes more rational than those made for...
We study the following basic intuition: when faced with a decision how to split their investment bet...
Framing effects play an important role in individual decision-making under risk. This investigation ...
The representativeness heuristic (RH) has been proposed to be at the root of several types of biases...
The authors show, with real and hypothetical payoffs, that consumers are willing to pay substantiall...
People make hundreds of decisions every day, and very little is known about how they do this. A big ...
[[abstract]]We document support for the narrow framing effect proposed by Tversky, A. and Kahneman, ...
Experiences form part and parcel of life. As suggested by existing literature, past experiences may ...
Varying several parameters of single-stage lottery choice tasks we investigate the question which fe...
The authors show, with real and hypothetical payoffs, that consumers are willing to pay substantial...
Consistent behaviours are a fundamental requirement of Expected Utility Theory (EUT). Individual’s d...