Behavioural W4 Flashcards

1
Q

What does the completeness axiom say? Express it formally.

A

An individual must be able to compare and make a decision between 2 bundles of goods.
q>r, r>q or both.

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2
Q

What does the transitivity axiom say? Express it formally.

A

If an individual consistently ranks options in a certain order, then their preferences must be internally consistent and transitive.
If q>r and r>s then q must be > s.

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3
Q

What does the continuity axiom say? Express it formally.

A

If an individual strictly prefers one option to another, they can find an intermediate option that they are indifferent between.
If q>r and r>s, then (p : q ; 1-p : s) - r.

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4
Q

What does the independence axiom say.

A

The relative ranking of two options should not change when an irrelevant third option is introduced.

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5
Q

Why are the EUT axioms important.

A
  1. Consistency - individuals’ decisions are internally coherent and reflect stable preferences over uncertain outcomes.
  2. Predictive Power - researchers can make precise predictions about how individuals will behave under different scenarios.
  3. Comparative Analysis - researchers can compare preferences and behaviors in different contexts and identify similarities and differences in decision-making strategies.
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6
Q

What is the Allais Paradox.

A

Despite the options having equivalent expected values or probabilities, individuals exhibit inconsistent preferences, leading to contradictory choices.

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7
Q

Explain the Ellsberg Paradox.

A

Despite the lack of information about the probabilities, individuals must make decisions based on their preferences and attitudes towards risk.

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8
Q

Why do people chance their choice depending on how the question is framed in the ‘unusual disease’ problem by Tversky & Kahneman (1981).

A

People often change their choice depending on how the question is framed due to cognitive biases and heuristics that influence decision-making. Individuals are more sensitive to losses than gains.

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9
Q

What is the reflection effect.

A

Refers to the tendency for individuals to be risk-averse when faced with gains and risk-seeking when faced with losses.

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10
Q

What is Prospect Theory

A

Proposes that individuals evaluate outcomes relative to a reference point, rather than in absolute terms.
1. Value function.
2. Probability Weighting Function.
3. Decision Rule.

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11
Q

What is the endowment effect.

A

Individuals ascribe higher value to items they own or possess.

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12
Q

Explain the following three key features of Prospect Theory: reference dependence, loss aversion and diminishing sensitivity.

A
  1. Reference Dependence - individual’s choices influenced by framing.
  2. Loss Aversion - risk-averse behaviour in the domain of gains.
  3. Diminishing Sensitivity - more risk-averse for larger probabilities.
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13
Q

What is Original Prospect Theory.

A
  1. Weighting of probabilities.
  2. Evaluation of outcomes.
  3. Integration of probabilities and outcomes.
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14
Q

How do original and cumulative prospect theory differ.

A

CPT offers a more flexible and nuanced framework for understanding decision-making under uncertainty by incorporating context-dependent probability weighting functions and separate value functions for gains and losses.

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15
Q

Write about one of the criticisms of PT.

A

Limited ability to account for individual differences and context-dependent factors in decision-making.
PT’s focus on laboratory experiments and hypothetical decision scenarios may not fully capture the complexities of real-world decision-making contexts.

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