Lesson 2 Quiz Questions Flashcards

1
Q

The Cognitive-Behavioral School of Thought

A

All behavior is subject to the principles of reinforcement by environmental conditions

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2
Q

The Developmental School of Thought

A

An overall aspiration to correct earlier disrupted development to foster change in the client’s behavior. Has it origin in and was influenced by Freudian psychoanalytic theory.

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3
Q

The Humanistic School of Thought

A

A philosophical stance that humankind is basically good and people have the inherent capability of self-direction and growth under the right circumstances.

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4
Q

How does bias affect a rational investor as described in traditional finance?

A

In traditional finance theory, a rational investor is not affected by bias.

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5
Q

Principles of the Modern Portfolio Theory/Traditional Finance

A
  1. Investors are Rational
  2. Markets are Efficient
  3. The Mean-Variance Portfolio Theory Governs
  4. Returns are Determined by Risk (Beta)
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6
Q

Risk Capacity

A

The degree of risk that a client can or should take

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7
Q

Risk Tolerance

A

The degree of risk that a client feels comfortable taking

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8
Q

Types of Cognitive Biases

A
  1. Anchoring
  2. Confirmation Bias
  3. Gambler’s Fallacy
  4. Herding
  5. Hindsight Bias
  6. Overconfidence
  7. Overreaction
  8. Prospect Theory
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9
Q

Anchoring

A

Attaching or anchoring one’s thoughts to a reference point even though there may be no logical relevance or is not pertinent to the issue in question.

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10
Q

Confirmation Bias

A

People tend to filter information and focus on information supporting their opinions.

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11
Q

Gambler’s Fallacy

A

Misconceptions around probabilities can lead to faulty predictions as to the occurrences of events.

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12
Q

Herding

A

Mimicking the actions or decisions of a larger group, even though the individual may not necessarily have made the same choice.

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13
Q

Hindsight Basis

A

Looking back upon an adverse event and changing it retrospectively.

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14
Q

Overconfidence

A

Concerns an investor that listens mostly to himself or herself.

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15
Q

Overreaction

A

Using emotion when making decisions in the stock market.

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16
Q

Prospect Theory

A

People value gains and losses differently and will base their decisions on perceived gains rather than perceived losses.

17
Q

The Affect Heuristic

A

Deals with judging something, whether it is good or bad.

18
Q

The Availability Heuristic

A

Relying upon knowledge that is readily available in a person’s memory.

19
Q

The Similarity Heuristic

A

When a decisions or judgment is made when a similar situation occurs.

20
Q

The Disposition Effect

A

The reluctance of an investor to realize a loss in a Behavioral framework.