Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
884748 | Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization | 2006 | 18 Pages |
Abstract
We investigate the robustness of results from confidence interval estimation tasks with respect to a number of manipulations: frequency assessments, peer frequency assessments, iteration, and monetary incentives. Our results suggest that a large share of the overconfidence in interval estimation tasks is an artifact of the response format. Using frequencies and monetary incentives reduces the measured overconfidence in the confidence interval method by about 65 percent. The results are consistent with the notion that subjects have a deep aversion to setting broad confidence intervals, a reluctance that we attribute to a socially rational trade-off between informativeness and accuracy.
Related Topics
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Authors
David Cesarini, Örjan Sandewall, Magnus Johannesson,