Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Gemini 2.5 Flash
Gemini 2.5 Flash
144 tokens/sec
GPT-4o
8 tokens/sec
Gemini 2.5 Pro Pro
46 tokens/sec
o3 Pro
4 tokens/sec
GPT-4.1 Pro
38 tokens/sec
DeepSeek R1 via Azure Pro
28 tokens/sec
2000 character limit reached

The Perils of Overreaction (2405.08087v1)

Published 13 May 2024 in econ.TH

Abstract: In order to study updating rules, we consider the problem of a malevolent principal screening an imperfectly Bayesian agent. We uncover a fundamental dichotomy between underreaction and overreaction to information. If an agent's posterior is farther away from the prior than it should be under Bayes' law, she can always be exploited by the principal to an unfettered degree: the agent's ex ante expected loss can be made arbitrarily large. In stark contrast, an agent who underreacts (whose posterior is closer to the prior than the Bayesian posterior) cannot be exploited at all.

Definition Search Book Streamline Icon: https://streamlinehq.com
References (23)
  1. Belief movement, uncertainty reduction, and rational updating. The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 136(2):933–985, 2021.
  2. Over-and underreaction to information. Mimeo, 2022.
  3. Base-rate neglect: Foundations and implications. Mimeo, 2019.
  4. Daniel J Benjamin. Errors in probabilistic reasoning and judgment biases. Handbook of Behavioral Economics: Applications and Foundations 1, 2:69–186, 2019.
  5. A model of nonbelief in the law of large numbers. Journal of the European Economic Association, 14(2):515–544, 2016.
  6. David Blackwell. Comparison of experiments. In Proceedings of the Second Berkeley Symposium on Mathematical Statistics and Probability, pages 93–102, Berkeley, Calif., 1951. University of California Press.
  7. David Blackwell. Equivalent comparisons of experiments. The Annals of Mathematical Statistics, 24(2):265–272, 1953.
  8. Overreaction and diagnostic expectations in macroeconomics. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 36(3):223–244, 2022.
  9. Coherent distorted beliefs. Mimeo, 2023.
  10. Geoffroy de Clippel and Xu Zhang. Non-bayesian persuasion. Journal of Political Economy, 130(10):2594–2642, 2022.
  11. Wesley M DuCharme. Response bias explanation of conservative human inference. Journal of Experimental Psychology, 85(1):66, 1970.
  12. Intuitive inference about normally distributed populations. Journal of Experimental Psychology, 78(2p1):269, 1968.
  13. The money pump as a measure of revealed preference violations. Journal of Political Economy, 119(6):1201–1223, 2011.
  14. Non-bayesian learning. The BE Journal of Theoretical Economics, 10(1), 2010.
  15. David M. Grether. Bayes rule as a descriptive model: The representativeness heuristic. The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 95(3):537–557, 1980.
  16. Alexander M. Jakobsen. Coarse bayesian updating. Mimeo, 2022.
  17. Bayesian persuasion. The American Economic Review, 101(6):2590–2615, 2011.
  18. Money pumps and bounded rationality. Mimeo, 2024.
  19. David Lewis. Papers in Metaphysics and Epistemology: Volume 2. Cambridge University Press, 1999.
  20. First impressions matter: A model of confirmatory bias. The quarterly journal of economics, 114(1):37–82, 1999.
  21. Brian Skyrms. Dynamic coherence and probability kinematics. Philosophy of Science, 54(1):1–20, 1987.
  22. Paul Teller. Conditionalization and observation. Synthese, 26(2):218–258, 1973.
  23. Mark Whitmeyer. Bayes= blackwell, almost. Mimeo, 2023.
Citations (1)

Summary

We haven't generated a summary for this paper yet.

X Twitter Logo Streamline Icon: https://streamlinehq.com