Essays in revealed preference theory and behavioral economics
Data(s) |
2016
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Resumo |
Time, risk, and attention are all integral to economic decision making. The aim of this work is to understand those key components of decision making using a variety of approaches: providing axiomatic characterizations to investigate time discounting, generating measures of visual attention to infer consumers' intentions, and examining data from unique field settings. <br/><br/> Chapter 2, co-authored with Federico Echenique and Kota Saito, presents the first revealed-preference characterizations of exponentially-discounted utility model and its generalizations. My characterizations provide non-parametric revealed-preference tests. I apply the tests to data from a recent experiment, and find that the axiomatization delivers new insights on a dataset that had been analyzed by traditional parametric methods. <br/><br/> Chapter 3, co-authored with Min Jeong Kang and Colin Camerer, investigates whether "pre-choice" measures of visual attention improve in prediction of consumers' purchase intentions. We measure participants' visual attention using eyetracking or mousetracking while they make hypothetical as well as real purchase decisions. I find that different patterns of visual attention are associated with hypothetical and real decisions. I then demonstrate that including information on visual attention improves prediction of purchase decisions when attention is measured with mousetracking. <br/><br/> Chapter 4 investigates individuals' attitudes towards risk in a high-stakes environment using data from a TV game show, Jeopardy!. I first quantify players' subjective beliefs about answering questions correctly. Using those beliefs in estimation, I find that the representative player is risk averse. I then find that trailing players tend to wager more than "folk" strategies that are known among the community of contestants and fans, and this tendency is related to their confidence. I also find gender differences: male players take more risk than female players, and even more so when they are competing against two other male players. <br/><br/> Chapter 5, co-authored with Colin Camerer, investigates the dynamics of the favorite-longshot bias (FLB) using data on horse race betting from an online exchange that allows bettors to trade "in-play." I find that probabilistic forecasts implied by market prices before start of the races are well-calibrated, but the degree of FLB increases significantly as the events approach toward the end. |
Formato |
application/pdf |
Identificador |
http://thesis.library.caltech.edu/9363/1/ImaiTaisuke2016Thesis.pdf Imai, Taisuke (2016) Essays in revealed preference theory and behavioral economics. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/Z9X63JT5. http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:01072016-175429851 <http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:01072016-175429851> |
Relação |
http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:01072016-175429851 http://thesis.library.caltech.edu/9363/ |
Tipo |
Thesis NonPeerReviewed |