Uncertainty pervades most aspects of life. From selecting a new technology to choosing a career, decision makers rarely know in advance the exact outcomes of their decisions. Whereas the consequences of decisions in standard decision theory are explicitly described (the decision from description (DFD) paradigm), the consequences of decisions in the recent decision from experience (DFE) paradigm are learned from experience. In DFD, decision makers typically overrespond to rare events. That is, rare events have more impact on decisions than their objective probabilities warrant (overweighting). In DFE, decision makers typically exhibit the opposite pattern, underresponding to rare events. That is, rare events may have less impact on decisions than their objective probabilities warrant (underweighting). In extreme cases, rare events are completely neglected, a pattern known as the “Black Swan effect.” This contrast between DFD and DFE is known as a description–experience gap. In this paper, we discuss several tentative interpretations arising from our interdisciplinary examination of this gap. First, while a source of underweighting of rare events in DFE may be sampling error, we observe that a robust description–experience gap remains when these factors are not at play. Second, the residual description–experience gap is not only about experience per se but also about the way in which information concerning the probability distribution over the outcomes is learned in DFE. Econometric error theories may reveal that different assumed error structures in DFD and DFE also contribute to the gap.

Beware of black swans. Taking stock of the description-experience gap in decision under uncertainty / de Palma, Andr('(e)); Abdellaoui, Mohammed; Attanasi, Giuseppe; Ben-Akiva, Moshe; Erev, Ido; Fehr-Duda, Helga; Fok, Dennis; Fox, Craig R.; Hertwig, Ralph; Picard, Nathalie; Wakker, Peter P.; Walker, Joan L.; Weber, Martin. - In: MARKETING LETTERS. - ISSN 0923-0645. - 25:3(2014), pp. 269-280. [10.1007/s11002-014-9316-z]

Beware of black swans. Taking stock of the description-experience gap in decision under uncertainty

Giuseppe Attanasi
;
2014

Abstract

Uncertainty pervades most aspects of life. From selecting a new technology to choosing a career, decision makers rarely know in advance the exact outcomes of their decisions. Whereas the consequences of decisions in standard decision theory are explicitly described (the decision from description (DFD) paradigm), the consequences of decisions in the recent decision from experience (DFE) paradigm are learned from experience. In DFD, decision makers typically overrespond to rare events. That is, rare events have more impact on decisions than their objective probabilities warrant (overweighting). In DFE, decision makers typically exhibit the opposite pattern, underresponding to rare events. That is, rare events may have less impact on decisions than their objective probabilities warrant (underweighting). In extreme cases, rare events are completely neglected, a pattern known as the “Black Swan effect.” This contrast between DFD and DFE is known as a description–experience gap. In this paper, we discuss several tentative interpretations arising from our interdisciplinary examination of this gap. First, while a source of underweighting of rare events in DFE may be sampling error, we observe that a robust description–experience gap remains when these factors are not at play. Second, the residual description–experience gap is not only about experience per se but also about the way in which information concerning the probability distribution over the outcomes is learned in DFE. Econometric error theories may reveal that different assumed error structures in DFD and DFE also contribute to the gap.
2014
black swans; risk; ambiguity; fourfold pattern; (non)-expected utility; probabilistic choices; experience-based decision making; description-based decision making
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Beware of black swans. Taking stock of the description-experience gap in decision under uncertainty / de Palma, Andr('(e)); Abdellaoui, Mohammed; Attanasi, Giuseppe; Ben-Akiva, Moshe; Erev, Ido; Fehr-Duda, Helga; Fok, Dennis; Fox, Craig R.; Hertwig, Ralph; Picard, Nathalie; Wakker, Peter P.; Walker, Joan L.; Weber, Martin. - In: MARKETING LETTERS. - ISSN 0923-0645. - 25:3(2014), pp. 269-280. [10.1007/s11002-014-9316-z]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1622250
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