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Unifying Revealed Preference and Revealed Rational Inattention

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  • Kunal Pattanayak
  • Vikram Krishnamurthy

Abstract

This paper unifies two key results from economic theory, namely, revealed rational inattention and classical revealed preference. Revealed rational inattention tests for rationality of information acquisition for Bayesian decision makers. On the other hand, classical revealed preference tests for utility maximization under known budget constraints. Our first result is an equivalence result - we unify revealed rational inattention and revealed preference through an equivalence map over decision parameters and partial order for payoff monotonicity over the decision space in both setups. Second, we exploit the unification result computationally to extend robustness measures for goodness-of-fit of revealed preference tests in the literature to revealed rational inattention. This extension facilitates quantifying how well a Bayesian decision maker's actions satisfy rational inattention. Finally, we illustrate the significance of the unification result on a real-world YouTube dataset comprising thumbnail, title and user engagement metadata from approximately 140,000 videos. We compute the Bayesian analog of robustness measures from revealed preference literature on YouTube metadata features extracted from a deep auto-encoder, i.e., a deep neural network that learns low-dimensional features of the metadata. The computed robustness values show that YouTube user engagement fits the rational inattention model remarkably well. All our numerical experiments are completely reproducible.

Suggested Citation

  • Kunal Pattanayak & Vikram Krishnamurthy, 2021. "Unifying Revealed Preference and Revealed Rational Inattention," Papers 2106.14486, arXiv.org, revised Jun 2023.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2106.14486
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Kunal Pattanayak & Vikram Krishnamurthy, 2020. "Necessary and Sufficient Conditions for Inverse Reinforcement Learning of Bayesian Stopping Time Problems," Papers 2007.03481, arXiv.org, revised Mar 2023.
    2. Forges, Françoise & Minelli, Enrico, 2009. "Afriat's theorem for general budget sets," Journal of Economic Theory, Elsevier, vol. 144(1), pages 135-145, January.
    3. Andrew Caplin & Mark Dean, 2015. "Revealed Preference, Rational Inattention, and Costly Information Acquisition," American Economic Review, American Economic Association, vol. 105(7), pages 2183-2203, July.
    4. Deb, Rahul, 2008. "Interdependent Preferences, Potential Games and Household Consumption," MPRA Paper 6818, University Library of Munich, Germany.
    5. Varian, Hal R., 1983. "Nonparametric Tests of Models of Investor Behavior," Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, Cambridge University Press, vol. 18(3), pages 269-278, September.
    6. Deb, Rahul, 2009. "A testable model of consumption with externalities," Journal of Economic Theory, Elsevier, vol. 144(4), pages 1804-1816, July.
    7. Kunal Pattanayak & Vikram Krishnamurthy, 2021. "Rationally Inattentive Utility Maximization for Interpretable Deep Image Classification," Papers 2102.04594, arXiv.org, revised Jul 2021.
    8. repec:dau:papers:123456789/4099 is not listed on IDEAS
    9. Francoise Forges & Enrico Minelli, 2009. "Afriat's theorem for generalized budget sets," Post-Print hal-00360726, HAL.
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