Join us for another event in the Microeconomics Research Seminar Series, Spring Term 2024.
Omer Tamuz, from the California Institute of Technology, will present research on Decomposable Stochastic Choice.
Abstract
We investigate inherent stochasticity in individual choice behavior across diverse decisions. Each decision is modeled as a menu of actions with outcomes, and a stochastic choice rule assigns probabilities to actions based on the outcome profile. Outcomes can be monetary values, lotteries, or elements of an abstract outcome space. We characterize decomposable rules: those that predict independent choices across decisions not affecting each other. For monetary outcomes, such rules form the one-parametric family of multinomial logit rules. For general outcomes, there exists a universal utility function on the set of outcomes, such that choice follows multinomial logit with respect to this utility. The conclusions are robust to replacing strict decomposability with an approximate version or allowing minor dependencies on the actions’ labels. Applications include choice over time, under risk, and with ambiguity.
This seminar will be held in the Economics Common Room on Friday 8 March 2024 at 2.00pm. This event is open to all levels of study and is also open to the public.
To register your place and gain access to the webinar, please contact the seminar organisers.
This event is part of the Microeconomics Research Seminar Series.