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An inquiry into the nature and causes of the Description - Experience gap

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  • Robin Cubitt

    (University of Nottingham)

  • Orestis Kopsacheilis

    (University of Nottingham)

  • Chris Starmer

    (University of Nottingham, School of Economics)

Abstract

According to the Description-Experience gap (DE gap), people act as if overweighting rare events when information about those events is derived from descriptions but as if underweighting rare events when they experience them through a sampling process. Due to the variety of experimental designs and measures reported in previous literature, the nature, causes and implications of the phenomenon for economic theory remain unclear. We present a new experiment which examines in a unified design four distinct causal mechanisms that might drive the DE gap, attributing it respectively to information differences (sampling bias), to a feature of preferences (ambiguity sensitivity) or to aspects of cognition (likelihood representation and memory). Our design permits model-free and model-mediated tests for these mechanisms and for the DE gap itself. Using a model-free approach, we elicit a DE gap similar in direction and size to the literature’s average and find that, when each factor is considered in isolation, sampling bias stemming from under-represented rare events, is the only significant driver. Yet, model-mediated analysis shows that rare events are overweighted even in experience. Moreover, this level of analysis reveals the potential of a smaller DE gap, existing even without information differences.

Suggested Citation

  • Robin Cubitt & Orestis Kopsacheilis & Chris Starmer, 2019. "An inquiry into the nature and causes of the Description - Experience gap," Discussion Papers 2019-15, The Centre for Decision Research and Experimental Economics, School of Economics, University of Nottingham.
  • Handle: RePEc:not:notcdx:2019-15
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

    1. Ilke Aydogan & Yu Gao, 2020. "Experience and rationality under risk: re-examining the impact of sampling experience," Experimental Economics, Springer;Economic Science Association, vol. 23(4), pages 1100-1128, December.
    2. Ilke Aydogan, 2021. "Prior Beliefs and Ambiguity Attitudes in Decision from Experience," Management Science, INFORMS, vol. 67(11), pages 6934-6945, November.

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    Keywords

    Decisions from Description; Decisions from Experience; Risk Preferences; Cumulative Prospect Theory; Ambiguity;
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