Psychologists report that people make choices on the basis of “decision utilities” that routinely overestimate the “experienced utility” consequences of these choices. This paper argues that this dichotomy between decision and experienced utilities may be the solution to an evolutionary design problem. We examine a setting in which evolution designs agents with utility functions that must mediate intertemporal choices, and in which there is an incentive to condition current utilities on the agent’s previous experience. Anticipating future utility adjustments can distort intertemporal incentives, a conflict that is attenuated by separating decision and experienced utilities
ABSTRACT: Human utility embodies a number of seemingly ir-rational aspects. The leading example in t...
Violations of expected utility theory are sometimes attributed to imprecise preferences interacting ...
PublishedResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tReviewThis is the author accepted manuscript. The final ver...
Psychologists report that people make choices on the basis of “decision utilities” that routinely ov...
Psychologists report that people make choices on the basis of "decision utilities'' that routinely o...
Human utility embodies a number of seemingly irrational aspects. The leading example in this paper i...
Recent work by Kahneman and others has led to a new focus in economics on a wellbeing-based approach...
Abstract. We compare level-k utility maximization and level-k regret minimization in evolutionary co...
The curvature of utility functions varies between people. We suggest that there exists a relationshi...
Since the pioneering work of von Neumann and Morgenstern in 1944 there have been many developments i...
We study a decision-maker who is presented with a menu of three options to consume. The options are ...
In economics, human decision-making models are based on the utility, or happiness, a person experien...
[A slightly revised version of this paper has been accepted by the BJPS] More attention has been dev...
Influential economic approaches as random utility models assume a monotonic relation between choice ...
Decision making with adaptive utility provides a generalisation to classical Bayesian decision theor...
ABSTRACT: Human utility embodies a number of seemingly ir-rational aspects. The leading example in t...
Violations of expected utility theory are sometimes attributed to imprecise preferences interacting ...
PublishedResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tReviewThis is the author accepted manuscript. The final ver...
Psychologists report that people make choices on the basis of “decision utilities” that routinely ov...
Psychologists report that people make choices on the basis of "decision utilities'' that routinely o...
Human utility embodies a number of seemingly irrational aspects. The leading example in this paper i...
Recent work by Kahneman and others has led to a new focus in economics on a wellbeing-based approach...
Abstract. We compare level-k utility maximization and level-k regret minimization in evolutionary co...
The curvature of utility functions varies between people. We suggest that there exists a relationshi...
Since the pioneering work of von Neumann and Morgenstern in 1944 there have been many developments i...
We study a decision-maker who is presented with a menu of three options to consume. The options are ...
In economics, human decision-making models are based on the utility, or happiness, a person experien...
[A slightly revised version of this paper has been accepted by the BJPS] More attention has been dev...
Influential economic approaches as random utility models assume a monotonic relation between choice ...
Decision making with adaptive utility provides a generalisation to classical Bayesian decision theor...
ABSTRACT: Human utility embodies a number of seemingly ir-rational aspects. The leading example in t...
Violations of expected utility theory are sometimes attributed to imprecise preferences interacting ...
PublishedResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tReviewThis is the author accepted manuscript. The final ver...