Attitudes toward uncertainty and randomization: an experimental study
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Publication:641827
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Cites work
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 3087284 (Why is no real title available?)
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Cited in
(22)- Choice theory when agents can randomize
- Mixed strategies and preference for randomization in games with ambiguity averse agents
- How do subjects view multiple sources of ambiguity?
- Revealed preferences under uncertainty: incomplete preferences and preferences for randomization
- Savage vs. Anscombe-Aumann: an experimental investigation of ambiguity frameworks
- Negative recency, randomization device choice, and reduction of compound lotteries
- Ambiguity, randomization and the timing of resolution of uncertainty
- Probabilistic social preference: how Machina's Mom randomizes her choice
- Hedging, ambiguity, and the reversal of order axiom
- A general theory of subjective mixtures
- Dynamic consistency for non-expected utility preferences
- Why do people prefer randomisation? An experimental investigation
- A full characterization of Nash implementation with strategy space reduction
- Anticipated regret as an explanation of uncertainty aversion
- Optimism and pessimism in games
- Randomization and dynamic consistency
- Randomization under ambiguity: efficiency and incentive compatibility
- Mixed extensions of decision problems under uncertainty
- Solution concepts for games with ambiguous payoffs
- The price for information about probabilities and its relation with risk and ambiguity
- Second-order ambiguous beliefs
- Attitudes toward uncertainty among the poor: an experiment in rural Ethiopia
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