Wednesday11Mar 2020

ESI Brown Bag Lectures

Matthew Kovach, Ph.D. - "The Focal Luce Model"

Wednesday, March 11, 2020 11:50 a.m. PST
2020-03-11 11:50 2020-03-11 12:50 America/Los_Angeles ESI Brown Bag Lectures Go to event listing for more details: https://events.chapman.edu/80287 WH 116 Wilkinson Hall 116 - ESI Classroom Alex Alekseev alekseev@chapman.edu

Free to attend

WH 116

Wilkinson Hall 116 - ESI Classroom

Staff, Faculty, and Students

are invited to attend.

Abstract: We develop a random choice model in which a decision maker divides the alternatives she faces into two groups, where one group is focal and thus she is more likely to choose alternatives in that group relative to alternatives in the non-focal group: The Focal Luce Model (FLM). The FLM generalizes Luce’s model and naturally captures bounded rationality models while behaviorally distinguishing between what is focal and the magnitude of the bias due to focality. We show how to identify utilities, focal sets, and bias terms from choice frequencies and behaviorally found the FLM with two weakenings of independence from irrelevant alternatives (IIA) which account for the decision maker’s revealed focus. We introduce a new condition on focal sets,Conditionally Decreasing, which captures an increasing difficulty of focusing on multiple alternative and encompasses several models of limited consideration. We apply our model to experimental data and show that the FLM may account for heterogeneity in play across games.


We develop a random choice model in which a decision maker divides the alternatives she faces into two groups, where one group is focal and thus she is more likely to choose alternatives in that group relative to alternatives in the non-focal group: The Focal Luce Model (FLM). The FLM generalizes Luce’s model and naturally captures bounded rationality models while behaviorally distinguishing between what is focal and the magnitude of the bias due to focality. We show how to identify utilities, focal sets, and bias terms from choice frequencies and behaviorally found the FLM with two weakenings of independence from irrelevant alternatives (IIA) which account for the decision maker’s revealed focus. We introduce a new condition on focal sets,Conditionally Decreasing, which captures an increasing difficulty of focusing on multiple alternative and encompasses several models of limited consideration. We apply our model to experimental data and show that the FLM may account for heterogeneity in play across games.

 

You can contact the event organizer, Alex Alekseev at alekseev@chapman.edu.

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