Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ....

47
Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon) Barcelona, Pompeu Fabra, March 8 '07 Survey Part I. Decision under Risk; Part II. Decision under Uncertainty; Economists vs. s ; Part III.Tractability of Psychologists Combined with Preference Model of Economists; Theory ; Part IV.Tractability of Psychologists
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Page 1: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes

by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept.,Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam

(joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

Barcelona, Pompeu Fabra, March 8 '07

SurveyPart I. Decision under Risk;Part II. Decision under Uncertainty; Economists vs. s ;Part III.Tractability of Psychologists Combined with Preference Model of Economists; Theory ;Part IV.Tractability of Psychologists Combined with Preference Model of Economists; Experiment.

Page 2: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

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$ 100

$ 0

½

½

or

?

Such gambles occur in games with friends.More seriously:

Part I: Decision under Risk

Risk: known probabilities

What would you rather have,

$50 for sure

Page 3: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

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More seriously: - Whether you can study medicine in the Netherlands;- In the US in the 1960s, whether you had to serve in Vietnam.

Even more seriously: Investments, insurance, medical treatments, etc. etc.

In public lotteries, casinos, and horse races.

Page 4: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

4

Expected valueSimplest way to evaluate risky prospects:

$ 100

$ 0

½

½

½100 + ½0 = 50

General:

x

y

p

1–p

px + (1–p)y

Convention: x > y 0

Page 5: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

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Risk aversion.

To explain it, expected utility (Bernoulli, 1738).

However, empirical observations:

$ 100

$ 0

½

½

$ 50

Page 6: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

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U is subjective index of risk attitude.

Expected utility is the classical economic risk theory.

p x + (1–p) yU( ) U( )x

y

p

1–p

Page 7: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

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Theorem (Marshall 1890). Risk aversion holds if and only if utility U is concave.

U

$ U is used as the subjective index of risk attitude!

Page 8: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

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Psychologists objected since 1950s:

U=

sensitivity towards money

≠risk attitude.

Economists do not like such “unfounded” (non-revealed-preference based) reasoning.

Page 9: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

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Intuition: risk attitude (also) through

processing of probabilities.

w( ) w( )

w(0) = 0,

w(1) = 1,

w is increasing.

w

p

00 1

1

p

w(p)

p U(x) + (1– p ) U(y)x

y

p

1–p

Page 10: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

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Probability weighting already considered in 1950s (Ward Edwards).'s argument intuitive, not theoretical.

Lola Lopes (1987): “Risk attitude is more thanthe psychophysics of money.”

utility

Page 11: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

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Probability weighting became serious in economics through revealed-preference theories of

- Kahneman & Tversky's (1979, "original") prospect theory,

- Quiggin-Schmeidler's (1982-1989) rank- dependent utility;

- Tversky & Kahneman's (1992, "new") prospect theory.

Plausible forms of probabilistic risk attitude:

Page 12: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

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inverse-S, (likelihood

insensitivity)

p

w

expected utility

mot

ivat

iona

l

cognitive

pessimism

extreme inverse-S ("fifty-fifty")

prevailing finding

pessimistic fifty-fifty

Abdellaoui (2000); Bleichrodt & Pinto (2000); Gonzalez & Wu 1999; Tversky & Fox, 1997.

Page 13: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

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In the beginning, economists' views:

Risk-aversion is universal.

U concave and prob. weighting wsimilar (pessimistic).

Imputs from empirical investigations by psychologists (Tversky and others):

Page 14: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

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Small chances at large gains

Large chances at small losses

Amazing, that “universal” risk aversion could survive in the economics literature for 30 years …

Systematic risk-seeking for:

Page 15: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

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with x1 … xn 0: w(p1)U(x1) +

(w(p2+p1) - w(p1)) U(x2) + ...

(w(pj+...+p1) - w(pj-1+...+p1)) U(xj) + ...

(w(pn+...+p1) - w(pn-1+...+p1)) U(xn)

Idea of Quiggin (1982), rank-dependent utility;

Evaluation of general prospectx1

xn

p1

pn

.

.

....

also (new, 1992) prospect theory.

Page 16: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

Part II: Decision under Uncertainty; (Economists vs. s)

Uncertainty: unknown probabilities

Event E: € -$ exchange rate will exceed 1.31 in a month from now. We don't know probability of E.

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or

What would you rather have,

portfolio of options s.t.

100K

0

E

not-E

put on bank

50K for sure

K: € 1000.

?

Page 17: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

Keynes (1921) and Knight (1921):

Here, as usual, we do not know probabilities. Can't do EV (or EU).

In reply, Ramsey (1931) and de Finetti (1931):Can get probabilities after all. Subjective ones. (From betting odds etc.)Can still do expected value/utility with those subjective probabilities.Perfectioned by Savage (1954).

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Page 18: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

Machina & Schmeidler (1992):

Can have subjective probabilities without committing to expected utility.

Can also do a nonexpected utility model (Quiggin-Kahneman&Tversky; etc.) using those subjective probabilities.

"Probabilistic sophistication."

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Page 19: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

However …

Ellsberg (1961) …

proved that:sometimes really probabilities cannot accommodate observed behavior, also not with probabilistic sophistication.

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Page 20: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

Common preferences between gambles for $100:(Rk: $100) (Ru: $100)(Bk: $100) (Bu: $100)

>

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Ellsberg paradox. Two urns with 20 balls.

Ball drawn randomly from each. Events:Rk: Ball from known urn is red. Bk, Ru, Bu are similar.

Known urnk

10 R10 B

20 R&B in unknown proportion

Unknown urnu

? 20–?

P(Rk) > P(Ru) P(Bk) > P(Bk)

+1

+1 ><Under probabilistic sophistication

with a (non)expected utility model:

Page 21: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

Ellsberg: There cannot exist probabilities in any sense.

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(Or so it seems?)

50-50 for unknown urn is treated really differently, is liked less, than 50-50 for known urn.

Ambiguity!

Need new decision models. Really new.

Since 1921 (Keynes&Knight) or 1961 (Ellsberg), for long time no-one could think of any.

Page 22: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

Lasted till 1989.

Then Schmeidler with rank-dependent utility ("Choquet expected utility") (also Gilboa 1987).

And Gilboa & Schmeidler (1989) with multiple priors.

And, Tversky & Kahneman (1992) with (new) prospect theory, incorporating Schmeidler's rank-dependent idea.

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Page 23: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

What has happened since?Divergence between psychologists and economists.

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Page 24: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

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Economists: - normatively oriented; - focus on ambiguity aversion;- theoretically sophisti- cated models; - very strictly revealed- preference based;- use general properties of models to predict general properties of optima.

Psychologists: - desciptively oriented; - also inverse-S;

- pragmatic, want to measure;- other inputs;

- not much external validity or implications or general concepts.

Page 25: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

Economists: Ambiguity very popular. Many applications of rank-dependent utility & multiple priors to all kinds of models:Mukerji, Sujoy & Jean-Marc Tallon (2001), “Ambiguity Aversion and Incompleteness of Financial Markets,” Review of Economic Studies 68, 883904. Gilboa, Itzhak (2004, Ed.), “Uncertainty in Economic Theory: Essays in Honor of David Schmeidler’s 65th Birthday.” Routledge, London.

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Page 26: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

First rank-dependent model was most popular.Then multiple priors was most popular.Neither model is/was very easy to handle.Nowadays alternative models also considered:

Klibanoff, Peter, Massimo Marinacci, & Sujoy Mukerji (2005), “A Smooth Model of Decision Making under Ambiguity,” Econometrica 73, 18491892. Maccheroni, Fabio, Massimo Marinacci, & Aldo Rustichini (2006), “Ambiguity Aversion, Robustness, and the Variational Representation of Preferences,” Econometrica 74, 14471498. Nau, Robert F. (2006), “Uncertainty Aversion with Second-Order Utilities and Probabilities,” Management Science 52, 136145.

Tractable measurements for rank-dependent exist. For others yet to be developed.

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Page 27: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

Many investments into "endogenous definition of (un)ambiguous:"Epstein, Larry G. & Jiangkang Zhang (2001), “Subjective Probabilities on Subjectively Unambiguous Events,” Econometrica 69, 265306. Ghirardato, Paolo & Massimo Marinacci (2002), “Ambiguity Made Precise: A Comparative Foundation,” Journal of Economic Theory 102, 251289.

However, many, including me, disagreed: ambiguity cannot be made entirely endogenous.

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Page 28: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

Psychologists:Many empirical measurements of ambiguity attitudes:

Budescu, David V. & Thomas S. Wallsten (1987), “Subjective Estimation of Precise and Vague Uncertainties.” In George Wright & Peter Ayton, Judgmental Forecasting, 6382. Wiley, New York. Cabantous, Laure (2005), “Ambiguity and Ability to Discriminate between Probabilities; A Cognitive Explanation for Attitude towards Ambiguity,” presentation at SPUDM 2005. Curley, Shawn P. & J. Frank Yates (1985), “The Center and Range of the Probability Interval as Factors Affecting Ambiguity Preferences,” Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 36, 273287. Einhorn, Hillel J. & Robin M. Hogarth (1985), “Ambiguity and Uncertainty in Probabilistic Inference,” Psychological Review 92, 433461. Hogarth, Robin M. & Hillel J. Einhorn (1990), “Venture Theory: A Model of Decision Weights,” Management Science 36, 780803.

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Page 29: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

In between (descriptive but revealed-preference-based):Frisch, Deborah & Jonathan Baron (1988), “Ambiguity and Rationality,” Journal of Behavioral Decision Making 1, 149157. Maffioletti et al.Di Mauro, Camela & Anna Maffioletti (2004), “Attitudes to risk and Attitudes to Uncertainty: Experimental Evidence,” Applied Economics 36, 357372. Halevy, Yoram (2006), “Ellsberg Revisited: An Experimental Study,” Econometrica, forthcoming. Keren, Gideon B. & Léonie E.M. Gerritsen (1999), “On the Robustness and Possible Accounts of Ambiguity Aversion,” Acta Psychologica 103, 149172. Sarin & Martin Weber et al.Sarin, Rakesh K. & Martin Weber (1993), “Effects of Ambiguity in Market Experiments,” Management Science 39, 602615. . Tversky et al.Tversky, Amos & Craig R. Fox (1995), “Weighing Risk and Uncertainty,” Psychological Review 102, 269283. Smith, Kip, John W. Dickhaut, Kevin McCabe, & José V. Pardo (2002), “Neuronal Substrates for Choice under Ambiguity, Risk Certainty, Gains and Losses,” Management Science 48, 711718.

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Page 30: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

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Part III: Tractability of Psychologists combined with Preference Model of Economists; Theory

Decision-foundation as economists.Tractability of psychologists, with quantifications and figures of ambiguity.

Bring the nice graphs of Einhorn & Hogarth in into Kahneman & Tversky's prospect theory.

Make ambiguity operational for decision theory, with data for economists and models for psychologists.

Page 31: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

Now show graphs of Hogarth & Einhorn (1990, Figs. 1-4, pp. 785-787).

Explain problem of x-axis; the big problem of ambiguity studies.

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Page 32: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

To achieve our goal:

Step 1: Define sources of uncertainty:Groups of events generated by the same uncertainty-mechanism. (Main message of Ellsberg is not ambiguous versus unambiguous, but is within-person between-sources comparisons .)Step 2: Reconciling Ellsberg with probabilistic beliefs through different decision attitudes for different sources:

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To digest all these concepts, you would need more time than given here; just main line.

To digest all these concepts, you would need more time than given here; just main line.

Page 33: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

>

Common preferences between gambles for $100:(Rk: $100) (Ru: $100) (Bk: $100) (Bu: $100)

20 R&B in unknown proportion

Ellsberg paradox. Two urns with 20 balls.

Ball drawn randomly from each. Events:Rk: Ball from known urn is red. Bk, Ru, Bu are similar.

10 R10 B

Known urnk Unknown urnu

? 20–?

P(Rk) > P(Ru) P(Bk) > P(Bk)

+ +1 1 ><Under probabilistic sophistication

with a (non)expected utility model:

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twos, depending on source

revisited.

Page 34: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

For each urn there are probabilities (0.5; it IS 50-50)! But different, source-dependent, decision-models.We have reconciled Ellsberg 2-urn with existence of probabilities.

Step 3: Define uniform sources, being sources for which there exist probabilities.Reason not fully explained here: These sources have a uniform degree of ambiguity; exchangeability. Resulting probabilities are choice-based.

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Page 35: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

Step 4: For uniform sources, can put the choice-based probabilities on the x-axis.

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Step 5: Need a tractable decision model: prospect theory.

Page 36: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

Decision-model (prospect theory):36

ws( ) ws( ) P(E) U(x) + (1– P(E) ) U(y)x

y

E

not-E P(E)'s are revealed from choice.ws: source-dependent probability transformation.

Now ambiguity attitudes can be captured through the graphs of ws, just as in Einhorn & Hogarth (1985, 1990).

Page 37: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

37

`c =0.08

w(p)

Fig.a. Insensitivity index a: 0;pessimism index b: 0.  

Figure 5.2. Quantitative indexes of pessimism and likelihood insensitivity

00.11= c

10.89

d =0.11

Fig.b. Insensitivity index a: 0;pessimism index b: 0.22. 

c =0.11

 

d =0.11

Fig.c. Insensitivity index a: 0.22;pessimism index b: 0.

0

d =0.14

Fig.d. Insensitivity index a: 0.22; pessimism index b: 0.06. 

d =01

p

c = 0 0

Page 38: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

38Part IV: Tractability of Psychologists Combined with Preference Model of Economists; an Experiment N=64 subjects.

Four sources of uncertainty:1. Risk (given probabilities);2. French stock index CAC40;3. Paris temperature;4. Foreign temperature.

Page 39: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

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Motivating subjects: Half random-lottery incentive system;Half hypothetical.

Page 40: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

Method for measuring choice-based probabilities40

EE EEE E

Figure 6.1. Decomposition of the universal event

a3/4

E

a1/2a1/4a1/8a3/8

E

b1a5/8

a7/8b0

a3/4a1/2a1/4

E E

b1b0

E E

a1/2

E

b1b0

E

E = S

b1b0

The italicized numbers and events in the bottom row were not elicited.

Page 41: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

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3025

Median choice-based probabilities (real incentives)

Real data over 19002006

0.035201510

0.8

0.6

0.4

0.2

1.0

Figure 7.2. Probability distributions for Paris temperature

Median choice-based probabilities (hypothetical choice)

0.0

Median choice-based probabilities (real incentives)

Real data over the year 2006

0 1 2 3123

0.8

0.6

0.4

0.2

1.0

Figure 7.1. Probability distributions for CAC40

Median choice-based probabilities (hypothetical choice)

Results for choice-based probabilities

Uniformity confirmed 5 out of 6 cases.

Page 42: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

Certainty-equivalents of 50-50 prospects.Fit power utility with w(0.5) as extra unknown.

42

0

HypotheticalReal

1 2 30

1

0.5

Figure 7.3. Cumulative distribution of powers

Method for measuring utility

Results for utility

Page 43: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

Certainty equivalents were measured for gambles on events. Knowing utility, we could calculate wP(E)) for events E, and then, knowing P(E), infer w.

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Method for measuring ambiguity attitudes

Page 44: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

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Results for measuring ambiguity attitudes

*0.125 0.8750.250 0.50 0.75 1

Figure 8.1. Average probability transformations for real payment

0.25

CAC40; a = 0.41; b = 0.05

*

*

0.125

0.875

0

0.75

1

0.50

*

*

*

Fig. a. Raw data and linear interpolation.

risk:a = 0.30, b = 0.11

Paris temperature; a = 0.39, b =   0.01

foreigntemperature; a = 0.29, b = 0.06

0.875

0.125

0.25

0.75

0.50

0

risk: = 0.67,  = 0.76

Fig. b. Best-fitting (exp( (ln(p)))).

Paris temperature;  = 0.54,  =  0.85

CAC40;  = 0.76;  = 0.94

foreigntemperature;  = 0.62,  = 0.99

1

0.125 0.8750.250 0.50 0.75 1

Page 45: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

45

0 0

*

*

*

*

**

*

Figure 8.3. Probability transformations for participant 2

Fig. a. Raw data and linear interpolation.

0.25

0.125

0.875

0.75

1

0.50

0.125

0.875

Fig. b. Best-fitting (exp( (ln(p)))).

0.25

0.75

1

0.50

0.125 0.8750.250 0.50 0.75 10.125 0.8750.250 0.50 0.75 1

CAC40; a = 0.80; b = 0.30

risk:a = 0.42, b = 0.13

Paris temperature; a = 0.78, b =  0.12

foreign temperature; a = 0.75, b = 0.55

CAC40;  = 0.15;  = 1.14

risk: = 0.47,  = 1.06

Paris temperature;  = 0.17,  =  0.89

foreign temperature;  = 0.21,  = 1.68

Page 46: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

46

participant 2;a = 0.78, b = 0.69

0.50

0

**

*

**

*

Fig. a. Raw data and linear interpolation.

*

Figure 8.4. Probability transformations for Paris temperature and 4 participants

0.25

0.125

0.875

0.75

1

0.50

0

Fig. b. Best-fitting (exp( (ln(p)))).

0.25

0.125

0.875

0.75

1

0.125 0.8750.250 0.50 0.75 10.125 0.8750.250 0.50 0.75 1

participant 18; a = 0.78, b = 0.69

participant 22;a = 0.50, b = 0.30

participant 48;a = 0.21, b = 0.25

participant 22; = 0.54,  = 0.53

participant 18;  = 0.22,  = 2.15

participant 2; = 0.17,  = 0.89

participant 48; = 0.67,  = 1.37

Page 47: Tractable Quantifications of Ambiguity Attitudes by Peter P. Wakker, Econ. Dept., Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam (joint with Mohammed Abdellaoui & Aurélien Baillon)

Conclusion:

Prospect theory & venture theory can be combined into a tractable decision theory, making ambiguity operational.

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