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PREFERENCE FOR FLEXIBILITY AND THE OPPORTUNITIES OF CHOICE

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Agents who rank sets of alternatives. and. always prefer any set to its subsets. ... choose the same, they value the chance to choose from larger/smaller sets ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PREFERENCE FOR FLEXIBILITY AND THE OPPORTUNITIES OF CHOICE


1
PREFERENCE FOR FLEXIBILITYAND THEOPPORTUNITIES
OF CHOICE
  • Salvador BARBERÀ
  • Birgit GRODAL

2
  • WHO EXHIBITS PREFERENCES FOR FLEXIBILITY?
  • Agents who rank sets of alternatives
  • and
  • always prefer any set to its subsets.
  • WHY DO WE NEED A THEORY ABOUT SUCH PREFERENCES?
  • Formally, because they (seem to) contradict the
    standard notion of indirect utility
  • Substantially, because it is an observed feature
    of preferences, and we would like to explain its
    origins.

3
  • BACKGROUND
  • PEOPLE RANK SETS WHY DO THEY?
  • Non-utilitarian explanations. Even if they will
    choose the same, they value the chance to choose
    from larger/smaller sets
  • Preferences for freedom (Sen, Pattanaik Xu)
  • Embarrassment of choices
  • Utility-based explanations.
  • Sets as the basis for lotteries
  • Sets as non-discarded elements for a future round
    of choice preferences for flexibility
  • Marshak, Kreps
  • Barberà Grodal
  • Barberà, Bossert Pattanaik, Ranking sets of
    objects, in Barberà, Hammond Seidl (Eds.),
    Handbook of Utility Theory. Volume II Extensions,
    Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecth. 893-977,
    2004.

4
PREFERENCES FOR FLEXIBILITY IN TWO-STAGE DECISIONS
  • KREPS (Econometrica 1979)
  • SCREENING in the 1st period
  • CHOICE in the 2nd WITH UNCERTAINTY ABOUT
    PREFERENCES
  • Agents prefer larger sets because they offer the
    possibility of changing decisions if preferences
    change.
  • BARBERÀ GRODAL
  • SCREENING in the 1st period
  • CHOICE in the 2nd WITH UNCERTAINTY ABOUT THE
    AVAILABILITY OF ALTERNATIVES
  • Agents prefer larger sets because they offer the
    possibility of changing decisions if some
    alternative becomes unavailable
  • (The restaurants example)

5
  • SET UP
  • A, a finite set of alternatives
  • 2A, its power set
  • SURVIVAL PROBABILITIES
  • Given by lotteries in the form
  • l 2A??, with ?E?2A l(E)1.
  • L is the set of such lotteries.
  • For l, E, l(E) is the probability that exactly
    the alternatives in E survive in the second
    period.
  • Now, for l, C, D, define
  • lC(D)? E?2Al EnCD l(E)
  • lC(D) is the probability that D will be the set
    of alternatives available, given that
  • C was screened in period 1
  • some E has survived, s.t. EnCD

6
  • PREFERENCES
  • On alternatives
  • uA?? ?? s.t. u(?)
  • On sets (to be taken as primitive/observable)
  • ?, a total order on 2A
  • . complete . transitive .antisymmetric (to be
    extended)
  • EXPECTED OPPORTUNITY OF SETS (for u, l)
  • V2A??
  • V(C)? max u(x) . lC(D)
  • D?2A x ?D??
  • EXPECTED OPPORTUNITY RANKINGS
  • The order ? on 2A is an expected opportunity
    ranking iff
  • ?l?L, uA?? ?? such that the corresponding V
    satisfies
  • B ? C ? V(B)gtV(C)

7
  • The inclusion property
  • An ordering ? satisfies the inclusion property
    iff, for all B,C?2A
  • B?C ?C?B
  • Theorem
  • Let A be a finite set and ? a total ordering on
    2A.
  • ? is an expected opportunity ranking iff it
    satisfies the inclusion property.
  • Comments
  • Same basic result as in KREPS
  • Extension to preorders? Yes, if we impose
  • positive probabilities for all sets
  • positive utilities for all alternatives

8
  • Comments to thin 1 (ctd.), and further analysis
  • The proof is constructive, relies on an
    appropriate assignment of survival proabilities
    while keeping all alternatives indifferent.
  • The construction implies that we cannot derive
    any knowledge about the agents utilities on
    alternatives from knowledge about set rankings.
  • Restricting the admissible form of uncertainty
    regarding survival may imply further
    restrictions.
  • We now turn to the implications of assuming
    independently distributed survival probabilites,
    with lA? 0,1 and
  • l(B)?b?B l(b) ?c?B (1- l(c))

9
  • RESERVALS
  • Let E, F ? 2A
  • A set B ? 2A, with B?(E?F)?
  • reverses E?F iff F?B?E?B
  • WHY REVERSALS?
  • Adding z to x has two effects
  • V(x,z)-V(x)max?u(z)-u(x))l(x)l(z),
    o(1-l(x))V(z)
  • 1st term. Utility gain
  • 2nd term. Insurance gain
  • When added to sets (in more general terms), the
    gains that come from new sets can be of different
    intensity.

10
  • SOME RESTRICTIONS ON SET RANKINGS DERIVED FROM
    THE ASSUMPTION OF INDEPENDENT SURVIVAL
    PROBABILITIES
  • If all elements in B are better than all those
    in C and D, adding B to C and to D cannot
    reverse.
  • Corollary for three alternatives
  • Since one of x,y and z must be best, it cannot be
    that (simultaneously)
  • x reverses y and z
  • y reverses x and z
  • z reverses x and y
  • Application the order
  • xyz is not an expected opportunity
  • zy
  • xz order with independent
  • xy
  • x survival probabilities
  • y
  • z
  • INDEPENDENCE HAS BITE!

11
  • THEOREM
  • Let A3. The total ordering ? on 2A can be
    represented as an expected opportunity ranking
    with independent survival probabilities iff it
    satisfies
  • The inclusion property, and
  • for any labeling x,y,z of the three alternatives
  • in A, if y reverses x?z, then z does not
    reverse x?y, nor y?x.
  • FINAL COMMENTS
  • We can learn some partial facts about utilities
    and probabilites from set ranking.
  • Hard to extend, probably not impossible.
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