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Inferring beliefs as subjectively imprecise probabilities
Authors:Steffen Andersen  John Fountain  Glenn W. Harrison  Arne Risa Hole  E. Elisabet Rutstr?m
Affiliation:1. Department of Economics, Copenhagen Business School, Copenhagen, Denmark
2. Department of Economics, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand
3. Department of Risk Management & Insurance and Center for the Economic Analysis of Risk, Robinson College of Business, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, USA
4. Department of Economics, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK
5. Robinson College of Business and Department of Economics, Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, USA
Abstract:We propose a method for estimating subjective beliefs, viewed as a subjective probability distribution. The key insight is to characterize beliefs as a parameter to be estimated from observed choices in a well-defined experimental task and to estimate that parameter as a random coefficient. The experimental task consists of a series of standard lottery choices in which the subject is assumed to use conventional risk attitudes to select one lottery or the other and then a series of betting choices in which the subject is presented with a range of bookies offering odds on the outcome of some event that the subject has a belief over. Knowledge of the risk attitudes of subjects conditions the inferences about subjective beliefs. Maximum simulated likelihood methods are used to estimate a structural model in which subjects employ subjective beliefs to make bets. We present evidence that some subjective probabilities are indeed best characterized as probability distributions with non-zero variance.
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