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On the futility of estimating utility functions: Why the parameters we measure are wrong, and why they do not generalize
[post]
2019
unpublished
We have known for a long time that people's risky choices depart systematically from expected utility theory,and also from related models like prospect theory. But it is still common to use expected utility theory orprospect theory to estimate parameters like risk aversion from sets of risky choices. We have also known fora long time that when parameters are estimated, a systematic departure between the model and the datacauses biased parameter estimates. Here we show how the bias in parameter
doi:10.31234/osf.io/qt69m
fatcat:h5fptk5xknhxvis2zvugei22hy