Biased probability judgment: Evidence of incidence and relationship to economic outcomes from a representative sample
Many economic decisions involve a substantial amount of uncertainty, and therefore crucially depend on how individuals process probabilistic information. In this paper, we investigate the capability for probability judgment in a representative sample of the German population. Our results show that almost a third of the respondents exhibits systematically biased perceptions of probability. The findings also indicate that the observed biases are related to individual economic outcomes, which suggests potential policy relevance of our findings. ; Bounded rationality Probability judgment Gambler’s fallacy Hot hand fallacy Representative design Long-term unemployment Financial decision making
Year of publication: |
2009
|
---|---|
Authors: | Dohmen, Thomas J. ; Falk, Armin ; Huffman, David ; Marklein, Felix ; Sunde, Uwe |
Institutions: | Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Cross-sectional earnings risk and occupational sorting: The role of risk attitudes
Bonin, Holger, (2007)
-
Homo Reciprocans: Survey Evidence on Behavioural Outcomes
Dohmen, Thomas J., (2009)
-
Direct evidence on risk attitudes and migration
Jaeger, David A., (2010)
- More ...