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Loss Aversion Under Prospect Theory: A Parameter-Free Measurement

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TLDR
In this paper, a parameter-free elicitation of prospect theory's utility function on the whole domain is proposed to measure loss aversion in an experimental study without making any parametric assumptions.
Abstract
A growing body of qualitative evidence shows that loss aversion, a phenomenon formalized in prospect theory, can explain a variety of field and experimental data. Quantifications of loss aversion are, however, hindered by the absence of a general preference-based method to elicit the utility for gains and losses simultaneously. This paper proposes such a method and uses it to measure loss aversion in an experimental study without making any parametric assumptions. Thus, it is the first to obtain a parameter-free elicitation of prospect theory's utility function on the whole domain. Our method also provides an efficient way to elicit utility midpoints, which are important in axiomatizations of utility. Several definitions of loss aversion have been put forward in the literature. According to most definitions we find strong evidence of loss aversion, at both the aggregate and the individual level. The degree of loss aversion varies with the definition used, which underlines the need for a commonly accepted definition of loss aversion.

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Eliciting von Neumann-Morgenstern Utilities when Probabilities Are Distorted or Unknown

TL;DR: In this article, the gamble-tradeoff method was proposed for eliciting utilities in decision under risk or uncertainty, which is robust against probability distortions and misconceptions, which constitute a major cause of violations of expected utility and generate inconsistencies in utility elicitation.
Journal ArticleDOI

New paradoxes of risky decision making.

TL;DR: 11 new paradoxes show where prospect theories lead to self-contradiction or systematic false predictions, and are consistent with and were predicted in advance by simple "configural weight" models in which probability-consequence branches are weighted by a function that depends on branch probability and ranks of consequences on discrete branches.
Journal ArticleDOI

The impact of experience on risk taking, overconfidence, and herding of fund managers: Complementary survey evidence

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide complementary survey evidence of 117 German fund managers which can improve our understanding in this field and find that herding is decreasing with experience while the evidence concerning risk taking and overconfidence is mixed.
Posted Content

The Shape of Utility Functions and Organizational Behavior

TL;DR: The global shape of the utility function is linked to organizational behavior and that the degree of risk aversion may be important in explaining owner-managers' trading behavior, but more structural organizational behavior appears to be linked to theglobal shape ofThe utility function.
Book

Individual decision making

Nick Chater
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