Resum
A decision maker (DM) may not perfectly maximize her preference over the feasible set. She may feel it is good enough to maximize her preference over a sufficiently large consideration set; or just require that her choice is sufficiently well-ranked (e.g., in the top quintile of options); or even endogenously determine a threshold for what is good enough, based on an initial sampling of the options. Heuristics such as these are all encompassed by a common theory of order-k rationality, which relaxes perfect optimization by only requiring choices from a set S to fall within the set’s top k(S) elements according to the DM’s preference ordering. Heuristics aside, this departure from rationality offers a natural way, in the classic ‘as if’ tradition, to gradually accommodate more choice patterns as k increases. We characterize the empirical content of order-k rationality (and related theories), and provide a tractable testing method which is comparable to the method of checking SARP.
| Idioma original | Anglès |
|---|---|
| Pàgines (de-a) | 1135-1153 |
| Nombre de pàgines | 19 |
| Revista | Economic Theory |
| Volum | 73 |
| Número | 4 |
| Data online anticipada | 1 de març 2021 |
| DOIs | |
| Estat de la publicació | Publicada - 2022 |
Fingerprint
Navegar pels temes de recerca de 'Order-k rationality'. Junts formen un fingerprint únic.Com citar-ho
- APA
- Author
- BIBTEX
- Harvard
- Standard
- RIS
- Vancouver