Pages that link to "Item:Q4418263"
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The following pages link to Does Market Experience Eliminate Market Anomalies? (Q4418263):
Displaying 27 items.
- Consistent inconsistencies? Evidence from decision under risk (Q272154) (← links)
- Staying ahead and getting even: risk attitudes of experienced poker players (Q485751) (← links)
- The willingness-to-accept/willingness-to-pay disparity in repeated markets: loss aversion or ``bad-deal'' aversion? (Q638623) (← links)
- Smoothing preference kinks with information (Q732921) (← links)
- Subject pool effects in a corruption experiment: A comparison of Indonesian public servants and Indonesian students (Q842817) (← links)
- Market simulation and the provision of public goods: a non-paternalistic response to anomalies in environmental evaluation (Q1015019) (← links)
- The human side of mechanism design: a tribute to Leo Hurwicz and Jean-Jacque Laffont (Q1022388) (← links)
- Taste uncertainty and status quo effects in consumer choice (Q1037585) (← links)
- Buy low, sell high: price gaps and neoclassical theory (Q1045980) (← links)
- Are groups `less behavioral'? The case of anchoring (Q1620909) (← links)
- Behavioral mechanism design: evidence from the modified first-price auctions (Q1934565) (← links)
- Do financial professionals behave according to prospect theory? An experimental study (Q1945663) (← links)
- Combinatorial auctions with endowment effect (Q2100637) (← links)
- Individual-level loss aversion in riskless and risky choices (Q2125253) (← links)
- On the conjunction fallacy in probability judgment: new experimental evidence regarding Linda (Q2268109) (← links)
- Multi-dimensional reference-dependent preferences in sealed-bid auctions -- how (most) laboratory experiments differ from the field (Q2268116) (← links)
- Expected utility theory and prospect theory: One wedding and a decent funeral (Q2271092) (← links)
- Determinants of investor expectations and satisfaction. A study with financial professionals (Q2291433) (← links)
- Blind stealing: experience and expertise in a mixed-strategy poker experiment (Q2347776) (← links)
- Learning design contingent valuation (LDCV): NOAA guidelines, preference learning and coherent arbitrariness (Q2427708) (← links)
- Understanding the reference effect (Q2437829) (← links)
- Imperfect memory and choice under risk (Q2442847) (← links)
- Do trade union leaders violate subjective expected utility? some insights from experimental data (Q2502398) (← links)
- Sunk 'decision points': a theory of the endowment effect and present bias (Q2633435) (← links)
- Thoughts matter: a theory of motivated preference (Q2689842) (← links)
- How Endogenization of the Reference Point Affects Loss Aversion: A Study of Portfolio Selection (Q5060485) (← links)
- A simple test of expected utility theory using professional traders (Q5293350) (← links)