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Status已发表Published
TitlePrince: An improved method for measuring incentivized preferences
Creator
Date Issued2021-02-01
Source PublicationJournal of Risk and Uncertainty
ISSN0895-5646
Volume62Issue:1Pages:1-28
Abstract

This paper introduces the Prince incentive system for measuring preferences. Prince combines the tractability of direct matching, allowing for the precise and direct elicitation of indifference values, with the clarity and validity of choice lists. It makes incentive compatibility completely transparent to subjects, avoiding the opaqueness of the Becker-DeGroot-Marschak mechanism. It can be used for adaptive experiments while avoiding any possibility of strategic behavior by subjects. To illustrate Prince's wide applicability, we investigate preference reversals, the discrepancy between willingness to pay and willingness to accept, and the major components of decision making under uncertainty: utilities, subjective beliefs, and ambiguity attitudes. Prince allows for measuring utility under risk and ambiguity in a tractable and incentive-compatible manner even if expected utility is violated. Our empirical findings support modern behavioral views, e.g., confirming the endowment effect and showing that utility is closer to linear than classically thought. In a comparative study, Prince gives better results than a classical implementation of the random incentive system.

KeywordBDM Choice list Incentive compatibility Matching Random incentive system
DOI10.1007/s11166-021-09346-9
URLView source
Indexed BySSCI
Language英语English
WOS Research AreaBusiness & Economics
WOS SubjectBusiness, Finance ; Economics
WOS IDWOS:000679772800001
Scopus ID2-s2.0-85111505566
Citation statistics
Cited Times:19[WOS]   [WOS Record]     [Related Records in WOS]
Document TypeJournal article
Identifierhttp://repository.uic.edu.cn/handle/39GCC9TT/9347
CollectionResearch outside affiliated institution
Corresponding AuthorWakker, Peter P.
Affiliation
1.Economics Department,Chambers College of Business and Economics,West Virginia University,Morgantown,United States
2.Erasmus School of Economics,Erasmus University Rotterdam,Rotterdam,3000,Netherlands
3.Birmingham Business School,University of Birmingham,Birmingham,JG Smith Building,B15 2TT,United Kingdom
4.School of Business and Economics,Free University Amsterdam,Amsterdam,Netherlands
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Johnson, Cathleen,Baillon, Aurélien,Bleichrodt, Hanet al. Prince: An improved method for measuring incentivized preferences[J]. Journal of Risk and Uncertainty, 2021, 62(1): 1-28.
APA Johnson, Cathleen, Baillon, Aurélien, Bleichrodt, Han, Li, Zhihua, van Dolder, Dennie, & Wakker, Peter P. (2021). Prince: An improved method for measuring incentivized preferences. Journal of Risk and Uncertainty, 62(1), 1-28.
MLA Johnson, Cathleen,et al."Prince: An improved method for measuring incentivized preferences". Journal of Risk and Uncertainty 62.1(2021): 1-28.
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