Probability weighting in choice under risk: An empirical test
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5959932
DOI10.1023/A:1011136203223zbMATH Open0987.91026MaRDI QIDQ5959932FDOQ5959932
Publication date: 11 April 2002
Published in: Journal of Risk and Uncertainty (Search for Journal in Brave)
Cited In (15)
- When Risk Perception Gets in the Way: Probability Weighting and Underprevention
- Probability weighting, stop-loss and the disposition effect
- Incomplete risk attitudes and random choice behavior: an elicitation mechanism
- Distorted probabilities and choice under risk
- Empirical evidence of two-attribute utility dependence on probability
- Probability weighting and utility curvature in QALY-based decision making
- The influence of probabilities on the response mode bias in utility elicitation
- On the Empirical Validity of Cumulative Prospect Theory: Experimental Evidence of Rank‐Independent Probability Weighting
- Gender differences when subjective probabilities affect risky decisions: an analysis from the television game show Cash Cab
- Solving the St. Petersburg paradox in cumulative prospect theory: the right amount of probability weighting
- Eliciting risk preferences using choice lists
- Weighted and quadratic models of choice under uncertainty
- Towards a general class of parametric probability weighting functions
- Testing prospect theories using probability tradeoff consistency
- Choices under ambiguity with familiar and unfamiliar outcomes
This page was built for publication: Probability weighting in choice under risk: An empirical test
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q5959932)