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Cognitive Uncertainty

Benjamin Enke and Thomas Graeber

No 26518, NBER Working Papers from National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc

Abstract: Because many economic decisions are difficult, people may exhibit cognitive uncertainty: subjective uncertainty about what the optimal action is. This paper shows that cognitive uncertainty predicts economic beliefs and actions, and that it provides a unifying lens for understanding behavioral anomalies in how people think about probabilities. The main idea is that when people are cognitively uncertain, they act as if they compress objective probabilities towards a cognitive default that is given by an ignorance prior. By experimentally measuring and exogenously manipulating cognitive uncertainty in different decision contexts, our analysis brings together and partially explains a large set of empirical regularities in choice under risk, choice under ambiguity, belief updating, and survey forecasts of economic variables. These include the probability weighting function, the fourfold pattern of risk attitudes, ambiguity-insensitivity, base rate insensitivity, conservatism, sample proportion effects, and predictable overoptimism and -pessimism in economic forecasts. Because people’s reported cognitive uncertainty systematically varies as a function of the objective probabilities in a decision problem, our framework also sheds light on the pronounced inverse S-shaped response patterns that pervade different literatures in behavioral economics.

JEL-codes: D01 D03 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019-11
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-cbe, nep-exp, nep-neu and nep-ore
Note: POL
References: View references in EconPapers View complete reference list from CitEc
Citations: View citations in EconPapers (21)

Published as Benjamin Enke & Thomas Graeber, 2023. "Cognitive Uncertainty," The Quarterly Journal of Economics, vol 138(4), pages 2021-2067.

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