Content area

Abstract

In his exposition of subjective expected utility theory, Savage (1954) proposed that the Allais paradox could be reduced if it were recast into a format which made the appeal of the independence axiom of expected utility theory more transparent. Recent studies consistently find support for this prediction. We consider a salience-based choice model which explains this frame-dependence of the Allais paradox. We then derive the novel prediction that the presentation format responsible for reductions in Allais-style violations of expected utility theory will also reduce Ellsberg-style violations of subjective expected utility theory. This format makes the appeal of Savage’s “sure thing principle” more transparent. We design an experiment to test this prediction and find strong support for such frame-dependence of ambiguity aversion in Ellsberg-style choices. In particular, we observe markedly less ambiguity-averse behavior in Savage’s matrix format than in a more standard “prospect” format. This finding poses a new challenge for the leading models of ambiguity aversion.

Details

Title
Ambiguity framed
Author
Schneider, Mark 1 ; Leland, Jonathan W 2 ; Wilcox, Nathaniel T 1 

 Economic Science Institute, Chapman University, Orange, CA, USA 
 Division of Social and Economic Sciences, National Science Foundation, Alexandria, VA, USA 
Pages
133-151
Publication year
2018
Publication date
Oct 2018
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
08955646
e-ISSN
15730476
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2131037368
Copyright
Journal of Risk and Uncertainty is a copyright of Springer, (2018). All Rights Reserved.