• Student
  • Faculty and Staff
  • Visitors
  • Alumni
  • |
  • 简体中文
  • ABOUT JNU
    • Mission & Vision
    • Facts
    • History
    • Administrative Offices
    • International Student Services
  • ADMISSION
    • Undergraduate
    • Graduate
    • Tuition
    • Scholarships
    • Professional Education
  • ACADEMICS
    • Schools and Colleges
    • Departments and Programs
    • Programs in English
    • Majors
    • Study Abroad
    • Online Learning
  • RESEARCH
    • Research Institutes
    • Centers and Labs
    • Strategic Research Areas
    • Libraries
    • Research at JNU
  • CAMPUS LIFE
    • Events
    • Housing & Dining
    • Health & Safety
    • Campus Services
    • Student Organizations
    • Visit & Directions
  • JOIN US
    • About Guangzhou
    • Why JNU
    • Job Opportunities
    • People
  • ABOUT JNU
    • Mission & Vision
    • Facts
    • History
    • Leadership
    • Administrative Offices
    • International Student Services
  • ADMISSION
    • Undergraduate
    • Graduate
    • Tuition
    • Scholarships
    • Professional Education
  • ACADEMICS
    • Schools and Colleges
    • Departments and Programs
      • Arts College of
      • Chinese Language and Culture College of
      • Economics College of
      • Electrical and Information Engineering College of
      • Foreign Studies College of
      • Information Science and Technology College of
      • Environment School of
      • Humanities School of
      • International Business School
      • International Studies School of
      • Journalism and Communication College of
      • Law School
      • Liberal Arts College of
      • Life Science and Technology College of
      • Management School of
      • Marxism School of
      • Medicine School of
      • Pharmacy College of
      • Physical Education School of
      • Science and Engineering College of
      • Shenzhen Tourism College
      • Research Institute
      • Research Center
    • Programs in English
    • Majors
    • Study Abroad
    • Online Learning
  • RESEARCH
    • Research Institutes
    • Centers and Labs
    • Strategic Research Areas
    • Libraries
    • Research at JNU
  • CAMPUS LIFE
    • Events
    • Housing & Dining
      • Housing
      • Dining
    • Health & Safety
    • Campus Services
    • Student Organizations
    • Visit & Directions
  • JOIN US
    • About Guangzhou
    • Why JNU
    • Job Opportunities
    • People
  • Student
  • Faculty and Staff
  • Visitors
  • Alumni

EVENTS

  • homepage  EVENTS

Lecture: Measuring Ambiguity Attitudes for All (natural) Events

Seminar of Economic and Social Research College (No. 36)

Date:April 5, 2017
Time:1:30-2:45 p.m.
Venue: 106B meeting room in Zhonghui building of Jinan University
Speaker: HUANG Zhen-xing, Shanghai University of Finance and Economics.
Sponsor: Economic and social research college of Jinan University.
Topic: Measuring Ambiguity Attitudes for All (natural) Events


About Huang Zhenxing
Associate professor of Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, he got his PhD at Tinbergen institute and Erasmus University Rotterdam, his master's degree in economics at Tinbergen economic institute and Amsterdam's free university, and his double bachelor's degree at Fudan- University of Groningen. His research filed are decision-making theory, behavioral economics, experimental economics, and financial economics. His research achievement has been published by many international famous journals, such as American Economic Review, Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics, etc.


Abstract:
Measurements of ambiguity attitudes have so far focused on artificial events, where subjective beliefs can be derived from symmetry assumptions. For natural events such assumptions usually are not available, creating a difficulty in calibrating subjective beliefs and, hence, in measuring ambiguity attitudes. This paper introduces a simple control for subjective beliefs even when they are unknown. We thus allow for a tractable and completely revealed-preference based measurement of ambiguity attitudes for all events, including natural ones. We introduce indexes of ambiguity aversion and ambiguity perception (or understanding) that generalize and unify many existing indexes. Our indexes are valid under many ambiguity theories. They do not require expected utility for risk, which is desirable for empirical purposes. Furthermore, they are easy to elicit in practice. An experiment on ambiguity under time pressure shows the tractability of our method. It gives plausible results, supporting the validity of our indexes.


Events

  • Study at JNU
  • Executive and professional education
  • Graduate
  • Undergraduate
  • International
  • About the University
  • Social Media
  • Map
  • Getting Around JNU
  • Getting to JNU
  • Contact JNU
  • Quick Links
  • Calendar
  • JNU Portal
  • News
  • Online Study
  • JNU email
  • Library

  • weibo
  • weixin
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • twitter
  • instagram
  • tiktok
  • 【IESR Seminar 440】Maggie Rong Hu
  • |
  • 【IESR Seminar 380】Religiosity and Crime: Evidence from Pope Francis's Visit to Philadelphia
  • |
  • Seminar | Jiangmin Xu, Peking University
  • |
  • Faking Trade for Capital Control Evasion: Evidence from Dual Exchange Rate Arbitrage in China
  • |
  • The Value of Infrastructure and Market Integration: Evidence from Renewable Expansion in Chile
  • |
  • Are older people aware of their cognitive decline? Misperception and financial decision making
  • |

Copyright © 2016 Jinan University. All Rights Reserved.