Publication | Closed Access
Cognitive Uncertainty
199
Citations
47
References
2023
Year
Consumer UncertaintyBehavioral Decision MakingIndividual Decision MakingJudgmental ForecastingCognitive BiasesExperimental Decision MakingUncertainty QuantificationBiasManagementExperimental EconomicsDecision TheoryEconomicsBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceEconomic RelevanceUncertainty (Knowledge Representation)Cognitive UncertaintyBehavioral EconomicsUncertainty (Quantum Physics)Objective ProbabilitiesBusinessDecision ScienceRisk Decisions
Abstract This article documents the economic relevance of measuring cognitive uncertainty: people’s subjective uncertainty over their ex ante utility-maximizing decision. In a series of experiments on choice under risk, the formation of beliefs, and forecasts of economic variables, we show that cognitive uncertainty predicts various systematic biases in economic decisions. When people are cognitively uncertain—either endogenously or because the problem is designed to be complex—their decisions are heavily attenuated functions of objective probabilities, which gives rise to average behavior that is regressive to an intermediate option. This insight ties together a wide range of empirical regularities in behavioral economics that are typically viewed as distinct phenomena or even as reflecting preferences, including the probability weighting function in choice under risk; base rate insensitivity, conservatism, and sample size effects in belief updating; and predictable overoptimism and -pessimism in forecasts of economic variables. Our results offer a blueprint for how a simple measurement of cognitive uncertainty generates novel insights about what people find complex and how they respond to it.
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