9: Decision Making Flashcards

1
Q

what are the 4 types of decision making?

A

multivariate choice, intertemporal choice, decision under uncertainty, decisions under risk

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2
Q

define: multivariate choice

A

making a decision between many different items

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3
Q

define: intertemporal choice

A

making decisions across time (eg £10 now or £20 in a week)

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4
Q

example: decision under uncertainty

A

should I take an umbrella

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5
Q

example: decision under risk

A

gambling, where you know the odds

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6
Q

define: expected utility

A

How good it feels to own that much money (subject to how much money you have)

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7
Q

what is prospect theory?

A

Outcomes considered as gains or losses with respect to a reference point, often the status quo. But as you move from the status quo, we become desensitised to gain/losses

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8
Q

define: endowment effect

A

once something belongs to you, it’s value increases beyond that when it wasn’t your

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9
Q

define: certainty effect

A

Changing something from 50-55% doesn’t have as big of an effect as changing competing from 95-100% or 0-5%

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10
Q

How does something being framed as a loss vs a gain affect people’s risk judgements?

A

people go for greater certainty for a gain and more risk for a loss

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11
Q

How does prospect theory explain the inverse risk taking for gains vs losses?

A

when you are gaining money, maybe getting £1000 vs definitely getting £500 = why take the risk, when you are maybe looking £1000 v definitely loosing £500, you’re already losing a substantial amount of money so why not take the risk

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12
Q

In prospect theory, which curve is steeper

A

loss - we are loss averse

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13
Q

what does loss aversion mean practically?

A

it feels worse to loose £1000 than gain it feels good to gain £1000

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14
Q

What are the 2 criticisms of prospect theory?

A
  • limited scope
  • purely descriptive
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15
Q

explain the limited scope of prospect theory

A

people’s choice of bet’s aren’t based on how they value them, they often just go with the higher likelihood of winning

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16
Q

define: attraction effect

A

putting an equally costly but clearly worse option makes more people go for the more expensive version than if there was no bad option. They will almost always choose the option that is made to look good

17
Q

explain how prospect theory is purely descriptive?

A

the curves it provides are accurate and good at predictions but it doesn’t explain why we are loss averse in nature etc

18
Q

what is decision by sampling?

A

when looking at how much £10 is worth to you, you search your mid for recent interactions with that amount
more interaction = more broke (probably) = more valuable