Detecting regime shifts: the causes of under- and overreaction

Detecting regime shifts: the causes of under- and overreaction

0.00 Avg rating0 Votes
Article ID: iaor20073440
Country: United States
Volume: 51
Issue: 6
Start Page Number: 932
End Page Number: 947
Publication Date: Jun 2005
Journal: Management Science
Authors: ,
Keywords: behaviour
Abstract:

Many decision makers operate in dynamic environments in which markets, competitors, and technology change regularly. The ability to detect and respond to these regime shifts is critical for economic success. We conduct three experiments to test how effective individuals are at detecting such regime shifts. Specifically, we investigate when individuals are most likely to underreact to change and when they are most likely to overreact to it. We develop a system-neglect hypothesis: Individuals react primarily to the signals they observe and secondarily to the environmental system that produced the signal. The experiments, two involving probability estimation and one involving prediction, reveal a behavioral pattern consistent with our system-neglect hypothesis: Underreaction is most common in unstable environments with precise signals, and overreaction is most common in stable environments with noisy signals. We test this pattern formally in a statistical comparison of the Bayesian model with a parametric specification of the system-neglect model.

Reviews

Required fields are marked *. Your email address will not be published.