Testing negative value of information and ambiguity aversion
From MaRDI portal
Publication:6090455
DOI10.1016/j.jet.2023.105730zbMath1530.91305OpenAlexW4386295632MaRDI QIDQ6090455
Christopher Kops, Illia Pasichnichenko
Publication date: 17 November 2023
Published in: Journal of Economic Theory (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jet.2023.105730
value of informationambiguity aversiondynamic consistencyEllsberg urninformation aversioncomplexity avoidance
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- A dynamic Ellsberg urn experiment
- The value of information -- an axiomatic approach
- Dynamic consistency, valuable information and subjective beliefs
- The ostrich effect: Selective attention to information
- Elicitation using multiple price list formats
- Randomization devices and the elicitation of ambiguity-averse preferences
- Maxmin expected utility with non-unique prior
- Subjectivity and correlation in randomized strategies
- Recursive multiple-priors.
- Dynamically consistent preferences under imprecise probabilistic information
- Regret theory: a new foundation
- Differentiating ambiguity and ambiguity attitude
- Anticipated regret as an explanation of uncertainty aversion
- Evaluating ambiguous random variables from Choquet to maxmin expected utility
- Decision-making with partial information
- Reacting to ambiguous messages: an experimental analysis
- Testing constant absolute and relative ambiguity aversion
- Can anticipatory feelings explain anomalous choices of information sources?
- Unintended hedging in ambiguity experiments
- Exploiting moral wiggle room: experiments demonstrating an illusory preference for fairness
- Ambiguous information and dilation: an experiment
- Risk, Ambiguity, and the Savage Axioms
- Preferences for One-Shot Resolution of Uncertainty and Allais-Type Behavior
- Two-Stage Lotteries without the Reduction Axiom
- Living with Risk
- Add-on Pricing in Retail Financial Markets and the Fallacies of Consumer Education*
- Endogenous sample selection: A laboratory study
- Eliciting risk preferences using choice lists
- "Preference Reversal" and the Observability of Preferences by Experimental Methods
- Preferences for partial information and ambiguity
- Ellsberg Revisited: An Experimental Study
- Equivalent Comparisons of Experiments
- Randomize at Your Own Risk: On the Observability of Ambiguity Aversion
- A test of (weak) certainty independence
This page was built for publication: Testing negative value of information and ambiguity aversion