Measuring Beliefs Under Ambiguity
From MaRDI portal
Publication:4994177
DOI10.1287/opre.2020.1980zbMath1470.91073OpenAlexW3039053709MaRDI QIDQ4994177
Olivier L'Haridon, Han Bleichrodt, Emmanuel Kemel, Mohammed Abdellaoui
Publication date: 17 June 2021
Published in: Operations Research (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1287/opre.2020.1980
Decision theory (91B06) Experimental work for problems pertaining to game theory, economics, and finance (91-05)
Related Items (4)
Preference robust distortion risk measure and its application ⋮ Preference robust state-dependent distortion risk measure on act space and its application in optimal decision making ⋮ All at once! A comprehensive and tractable semi-parametric method to elicit prospect theory components ⋮ The uniqueness of local proper scoring rules: the logarithmic family
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Does probability weighting matter in probability elicitation?
- Preference and belief: ambibiguity and competence in choice under uncertainty
- Attitude toward imprecise information
- Eliciting decision weights by adapting de Finetti's betting-odds method to prospect theory
- Maxmin expected utility with non-unique prior
- Advances in prospect theory: cumulative representation of uncertainty
- Differentiating ambiguity and ambiguity attitude
- Risk, Ambiguity, and the Savage Axioms
- The Midweight Method to Measure Attitudes Toward Risk and Ambiguity
- Comonotonic proper scoring rules to measure ambiguity and subjective beliefs
- Evaluating Quantile Assessments
- State of the Art—Utility Assessment Methods
- Prospect Theory
- A Truth Serum for Non-Bayesians: Correcting Proper Scoring Rules for Risk Attitudes
- Subjective Probability and Expected Utility without Additivity
- The Probability Weighting Function
- Quantile Evaluation, Sensitivity to Bracketing, and Sharing Business Payoffs
- The Binarized Scoring Rule
- Bayes Factors
- A Smooth Model of Decision Making under Ambiguity
- Measuring Expectations
- Risk, Ambiguity, and the Separation of Utility and Beliefs
- Statistical Methods for Eliciting Probability Distributions
This page was built for publication: Measuring Beliefs Under Ambiguity