Ambiguity aversion in the field of insurance: Insurers' attitude to imprecise and conflicting probability estimates
From MaRDI portal
Publication:885069
DOI10.1007/s11238-006-9015-1zbMath1121.91056OpenAlexW2141154058MaRDI QIDQ885069
Publication date: 7 June 2007
Published in: Theory and Decision (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11238-006-9015-1
Related Items (9)
The impact of governmental assistance on insurance demand under ambiguity: a theoretical model and an experimental test ⋮ An optimal insurance design problem under Knightian uncertainty ⋮ Attitudes toward uncertainty among the poor: an experiment in rural Ethiopia ⋮ Reinsurance games with two reinsurers: tree versus chain ⋮ The fog of fraud -- mitigating fraud by strategic ambiguity ⋮ An experimental investigation of imprecision attitude and its relation with risk attitude and impatience ⋮ Decisions with conflicting and imprecise information ⋮ Insurance bargaining under ambiguity ⋮ Comparative ambiguity aversion and downside ambiguity aversion
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Preference and belief: ambibiguity and competence in choice under uncertainty
- Recent developments in modeling preferences: Uncertainty and ambiguity
- Commonalities in time and ambiguity aversion for long-term risks
- Hopes and fears: The conflicting effects of risk ambiguity
- Do trade union leaders violate subjective expected utility? some insights from experimental data
- Risk, Ambiguity, and the Savage Axioms
- Ambiguity Aversion and Comparative Ignorance
- Effects of outcome and probabilistic ambiguity on managerial choices
This page was built for publication: Ambiguity aversion in the field of insurance: Insurers' attitude to imprecise and conflicting probability estimates