People often indicate a higher price for an object when they own it (i.e., as sellers) than when they do not (i.e., as buyers)-a phenomenon known as the endowment effect. We develop a cognitive modeling approach to formalize, disentangle, and compare alternative psychological accounts (e.g., loss aversion, loss attention, strategic misrepresentation) of such buyer-seller differences in pricing decisions of monetary lotteries. To also be able to test possible buyer-seller differences in memory and learning, we study pricing decisions from experience, obtained with the sampling paradigm, where people learn about a lottery's payoff distribution from sequential sampling. We first formalize different accounts as models within three computational frameworks (reinforcement learning, instance-based learning theory, and cumulative prospect theory), and then fit the models to empirical selling and buying prices. In Study 1 (a reanalysis of published data with hypothetical decisions), models assuming buyer-seller differences in response bias (implementing a strategic-misrepresentation account) performed best; models assuming buyer-seller differences in choice sensitivity or memory (implementing a loss-attention account) generally fared worst. In a new experiment involving incentivized decisions (Study 2), models assuming buyer-seller differences in both outcome sensitivity (as proposed by a loss-aversion account) and response bias performed best. In both Study 1 and 2, the models implemented in cumulative prospect theory performed best. Model recovery studies validated our cognitive modeling approach, showing that the models can be distinguished rather well. In summary, our analysis supports a loss-aversion account of the endowment effect, but also reveals a substantial contribution of simple response bias.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3758/s13423-017-1237-4 | DOI Listing |
PNAS Nexus
September 2022
Department of Mathematics, City, University of London, London EC1V 0HB, UK.
Online marketplaces are the main engines of legal and illegal e-commerce, yet their empirical properties are poorly understood due to the absence of large-scale data. We analyze two comprehensive datasets containing 245M transactions (16B USD) that took place on online marketplaces between 2010 and 2021, covering 28 dark web marketplaces, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
January 2023
College of Economics and Management, Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan, China.
The fact that most buyer-seller ties in the social commerce community are easy to form but hard to keep has brought the "social bubble" into social commerce. Following the literature streams of network closure and social commerce and based on the longitudinal dataset of an online social commerce community over a year, this article explores the buyer-seller ties evolution in the social commerce community through two stages, that is, ties emergence versus ties persistence. In this study, the authors build a hazard model and estimate with a semiparametric partial likelihood method.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcon Disaster Clim Chang
June 2020
Indian Instiute of Technology Madras, Chennai, India.
This paper estimates the cost of the lockdown of some sectors of the world economy in the wake of COVID-19. We develop a multi sector disequilibrium model with buyer-seller relations between agents located in different countries. The production network model allows us to study not only the direct cost of the lockdown but also indirect costs which emerge from the reductions in the availability of intermediate inputs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychon Bull Rev
December 2017
School of Economics and Management, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
People often indicate a higher price for an object when they own it (i.e., as sellers) than when they do not (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA large body of empirical research has examined the impact of trading perspective on pricing of consumer products, with the typical finding being that selling prices exceed buying prices (i.e., the endowment effect).
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