The Relationship Between Risk Attitudes and Heuristics in Search Tasks: A Laboratory Experiment
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The existing evidence from laboratory experiments suggests that relatively
simple heuristics describe observed search behavior better than the optimal stopping rule
derived under risk neutrality. Such behavior could be generated by two entirely different
classes of decision rules: (i) rules that are optimal conditional on utility functions that
depart from risk neutrality or (ii) heuristics that derive from limited cognitive processing
capacities and satisfycing. In this paper, we develop and test search models that depart
from the standard assumption of risk neutrality in order to distinguish these two possibilities. In our experiment, we present subjects not only with a standard search task, but
also with a series of lottery tasks that serve to elicit the shape of their utility functions.
We do not find a relationship between behavior in the search task and measures of risk
aversion. Our data suggest, however, that loss aversion is important for explaining search
behavior.
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