Overconfidence Examples

Model

Results

Variants Evolution Examples Literature

Overconfidence & Diversification Yuval Heller Oxford University 2011

1

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

 Participants answer “trivia” questions  Report confidence (subjective probability) of being correct

(true accuracy)

Overconfidence (Lichtenstein, Fischhoff & Phillips, 1982) People report 80% Answers in which confidence; people reportonly 80% 65% are correct. confidence. Only 65% are correct.

 Instructed to be calibrated (sometimes with incentives)

(confidence)

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

 Interpretation: overestimating accuracy of private information  Oskamp, 1965; …

(true accuracy)

Overconfidence (Lichtenstein, Fischhoff & Phillips, 1982) People report 80% Answers in which confidence; people reportonly 80% 65% are correct. confidence. Only 65% are correct.

 Recent surveys: Griffin & Brenner (2004), Skala (2008)

Rational Explanations (confidence) (confidence)

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Main Motivation  Existing Evolutionary foundations for overconfidence: 

Group selection (Bernardo & Welch, 01): improve aggregation of information  a few overconfident agents survive



Second-best outcome; compensates another bias (e.g., excess risk aversion): Wang (91), Blume & Easly (92), Waldman (94)

 Gene’s interest in diversification  overconfidence 

First-best outcome, individual selection, everyone is overconfident 4

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Secondary Motivation  Existing economic models assume overconfidence 

Directly (Odean, 98, Gervais & Odean, 01, Sandroni & Squintani, 07)



“Indirectly” - Positive utility from good self esteem (Compte & Postlewaite, 04; Köszegi, 06; Weinberg, 09)

 Strategic interaction  overconfidence 

Risk-averse principals prefer overconfident agents

5

Two Motivations - One Model  Two different motivations and interpretations: Evolutionary

Strategic

Length

Repeated dynamics

Risk-aversion

Endogenous

Single-stage interaction Exogenous

Explains why

On average people are overconfident

Overconfident agents are more preferred

 Single unifying model (reduced form) 6

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Contents  Introduction  Illustrating Example  Model  Results  Evolutionary application  Variants and Extensions

7

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Related Phenomena  Better than average  Over-optimism about the future  Underestimating variance / confidence intervals  Literature: Lichtenstein et al. (1982), Soll & Klayman (2004), Teigen & Jorgensen (2005), Svenson (1981), Alicke & Govorun (2005), Taylor & Brown (1988)

Experts 8

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Illustrating Example

9

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Risk-averse venture capital CEO Analyst 1

Analyst n

Accepted guidelines

1-q failure

manages investments in his area (chooses a startup company)

q (positively correlated with others) success

1-pi failure

Own judgment

pi (independent of others) success 10

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Model

11

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Payoffs: Agent: 1 (success) / 0 (failure)

g1

2nd example

gi:[0,1][0,1]

gn

Private: 0
Stage 2:agents receive signals

Stage 3: agents choose actions

Variants

Risk-averse Principal

Principal: h(#successful agents) (h’>0, h’’<0) Stage 1: principal chooses bias profile

Evolution

Public: 0
Accepted guidelines (aq) 1-q failure

q (positively correlated success with others)

Own judgment (ap) pi (independent 1-pi of others) failure

success 12

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Basic Intuition  Agent – only cares if he succeeds: 

Dominating strategy: Choose ap iff gi(pi)>q



Bias profile uniquely determines actions

 Risk-averse principal – cares for total number of successes: 

Tradeoff: higher expectation  lower variance



Agents with q-δ


Chooses overconfident agents: g(p)=p+δ >p 13

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Comments  Focus: monetary incentives are costly / infeasible 

Evolutionary framework (described later)



Restriction to informal mechanisms (risk-neutral stock owners)



Complicated contracts are costly

 ρ - correlation between agents that choose aq 

Correlation

Benchmark: ρ =1 (all follow aq : succeed or fail together)

 Technical assumption: decreasing absolute risk aversion  Agents’ preference for risk is irrelevant

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Results

15

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Main Result  Unique optimal bias profile exists: 

Homogenous profile: ∀i gi=g



Represents overconfidence (g (p)>p, ∀0


Induces the first-best payoff



Strictly better than any other profile



Depends only on h,ρ & fp (not fq)

Existence Uniqueness Intuition

 Asymptotic result (sufficiently many agents)

Definitions Contrary 16

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Comparative Statics (1)  principal I is more risk-averse than principal II (hI= ΨοhII, Ψ’>0, Ψ’’<0)  chooses more overconfident agents: ∀p , gI(p)>gII(p)  Intuition: 

More risk-aversion 



Principal cares more for variance (less for expectation) 



More agents should follow ap (their judgment) 



Agents should be more overconfident 17

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Comparative Statics (2)  If ρ (correlation) becomes larger  the principal hires more overconfident agents

Correlation

 Intuition: 

Higher correlation 



More aggregate risk from aq 



More agents should follow ap 



More overconfidence 18

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Comparative Statics (3)  Harder tasks (accurate signals are less likely) induce more overconfidence 

Hard-easy effect (Lichtenstein, et al., 1982; Moore & Healy, 2008)

 Intuition: 

Principal wants agents with the most accurate private signals to choose ap



In an harder environment, each pi is more likely to be among the most accurate 19

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Overconfidence & Evolutionary Stability

20

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Evolutionary Model (Only Agents) g1

gi:[0,1][0,1]

Each type induces a (possibly random) bias function

Private: 0
Agents receive signals

Each agent makes an important decision

(evaluated as gi(pi)

Public: 0
Conformity (aq) 1-q failure

q (positively correlated success with others)

Payoff (fitness): Agent: H (success) / L (failure)

gn

(evaluated correctly) Own judgment (ap) 1-pi failure

pi (independent of others) success

Which type will survive in the long run?

21

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Intuition  #offspring : product of the average fitness in each generation  The type that maximizes the geometric mean of the average fitness prevails the population (large population, long run)  Evolutionary dynamics behaves as it was a risk-averse principal with logarithmic utility: 

h(#successful agents)=log (average fitness)

 See: Lewontin & Cohen (1969), Mcnamara (1995), Robson (1996) 22

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Results (1)  In the long run all agents are overconfident  Overconfidence level depends only on: D=(H-L)/L, ρ & fp  Explains findings such as Yates et al. (2002): 

Both Westerns and Asians present overconfidence



Level of overconfidence substantially differs

23

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Results (2)  Larger D (more important decisions) induces more overconfidence (Sieber, 1974) 

Intuition: larger D  more aggregate risk in aq  more overconfidence

 When people are certain in their private information (1-g(p)~0), they are often wrong (1-p>>/1-g(p)) 

[for large D-s]

False certainty effect (Fischhoff et al., 1977)

 Results hold for any CRRA utility 24

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Variants & Extensions  Social welfare  Agents as experts  Costly private signals  Choosing the number of agents

Example

 Bias w.r.t. the public signal  Underestimating variance

25

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Summary  Explaining overconfidence as the result of diversification  Novel evolutionary foundation of overconfidence and its observed properties (1st best, no other bias, no group selection)  Demonstrate why principals may prefer overconfident agents in some strategic interactions Future Research 2nd example 37

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Future Research  Comparing costs: bias profile / monetary incentives / biased preferences 

General (non-binary) payoff structure

 Applying the model to voting / career-motivated experts 

Requires relaxing a few technical assumptions: Non-risk-averse principal, asymmetric agents, few agents, general signaling system

38

Introduction

Example

Model

Results

Evolution

Variants

Related Literature (Models of Overconfidence)  Conflict with future selves (Bénabou & Tirole ,QJE 2002)  Positive emotions improve performance / utility: 

Compte & Postlewaite (AER 2004), Köszegi (2006), Weinberg (2009)

 Taking credit for lucky successes (Gervais & Odean, 2001)  Apparent overconfidence due to unbiased random errors 

Van Den Steen (AER 2004), Moore (2007), Benoit & Dubra (2008)

 Influence of overconfident agents 

Odean (JoF 1998), Sandroni & Squintani (AER 2007)

 Evolutionary foundations: Bernardo & Welch (2001), Blume & Easly (1992), Wang (1991), Waldman (AER 1994) 58

Introduction

Example

Stage 1: principal chooses bias profile

g1

Results

Evolution

Variants

gi:[0,1][0,1] gn

Private: pi~f(pi) (evaluated as gi(pi)

Stage 2:agents receive signals

Public: q~f(p) (evaluated correctly)

Stage 3: agents choose actions Common lottery Independent lotteries

Model

Accepted guidelines (aq) q

1-q

(1 − ρ ) q

(

)

ρ + 1− ρ q

Own judgment (ap) pi (independent 1-pi of others) failure Total success probability: q

failure

success

failure

success

success

59

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