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summary course 4 behavioural finance

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summary course 4 behavioural finance, Master of business economics

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Course 4: Heuristics and cognitive biases
Econs (= homo economicus)
 (Rational) preferences, unbiased beliefs and expectations
 Make optimal choices bases on these beliefs and preferences
 Infinite cognitive abilities and willpower
 Primary motivation is self- interest, limited altruism
Heuristics
= mental shortcuts or rules of thumb that people use to make decisions quickly
and efficiently, especially under uncertainty or limited information. Simplify
complex problems; good decisions w/out much time or effort


Cognitive biases
=systematic patterns of deviation from rational judgment that result from the use
of heuristics, as well as from emotional, motivational or social -influences.

Heuristics
1) Representativeness
= The degree to which an event is similar to the population
 Our brain relies on similarities w/ previous experience when evaluating a
situation or probabilities
 Evaluating according to their important, representative characteristics


2) Availability
=People estimate the likelihood of an event based on the ease with which they
can recall instances of that event
 Things that come rapidly to mind
 Overweight very recent, highly visible or vivid events


3) Anchoring and adjustment
= An initial value pulls judgements; subsequent adjustment is insufficient
 Cognitive economy (mental laziness)
➔ Starting from a number you already have saves effort
 Coherence seeking
➔ Compromise between anchor and model feels reasonable
 Social stickiness
➔ Public commitments create reputational anchors
➔ Link to disposition effect: Price becomes anchor + loss aversion




1

, Biases in probability judgement
1) Law of small numbers (= sample size neglect)
=People expect small numbers to mimic the characteristics of the whole
population (or long-run frequencies). We over-interpret short streaks or a
few observations as if they were representative.
The fallacy: Samples represent the population, even small samples must look
balanced.
 Mistaking noice for signal
 Expecting randomness to self-correct immediately
 Underestimating how random sequences accur
Related patterns
 The Gambler’s fallacy — After a streak (e.g., HHHH), people expect
reversal (T “is due”), as if outcomes were negatively autocorrelated in the
short run.
➔ US refugee judges 3.3% more likely to reject a case if they approved the
previous one
➔ Loan applications: approval (per loan officer) 9% less likely after previous
application approved.
 The Hot Hand fallacy — Short success streaks are read as persistent
skill, so continuation is overestimated.
Neglect of regression to the mean — Extreme outcomes (in small samples)
are expected to persist rather than revert toward average. Role of skill vs. luck
2) Partition dependence
= Judged probabilities depend on how the outcome space is partitioned or
described. A variant of the framing effect
Related patterns
 Subadditivity: The sum of parts exceeds the judged probability of the
whole.
➔ which basketball teams would win the NBA? Estimated P probabilities for 8
remaining teams 218%.
 Equipartition Heuristic — When unsure, people roughly split probability
across listed categories.
 Design sensitivity: People’s choice depend on menu design. Change the
design; change the answer.


3) Conservatism
= insufficient belief revision, people move their posterior too slowly relative to
bayes when presented with new information
 Cognitive friction; bayes is hard
 Caution; prefer not to move fast



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