Research Seminars & Other Events

Attention Theory

Date: 7 MARCH 2023
Time: 12.30pm - 1.30pm
Speaker: Prof. Soo Hong CHEW
Venue: I³ Building, 21 Heng Mui Keng Terrace, Executive Seminar Room, Level 4

Programme

Title: Attention Theory

 Professor Soo Hong CHEW

( Southwestern University of Finance and Economics; National University of Singapore)

Abstract:

We model the role of attention in decision making under risk and uncertainty from the perspective of the decision maker as a cognitive miser, and arrive at the utility of a lottery through potentially volatile attention-dependent decision weights. The resulting Attention Theory (AT) exhibits continuity in nonlinear probability weighting and can account for a range of loss-gain attitude between loss aversion and gain seeking. When between loss aversion and gain seeking. When top-down attention is stable and consequentialist, AT can account for Allais behavior, fourfold pattern of risk attitude, and disjunction effect. Under volatile consequentialist attention, AT encompasses multiple attention functions and can exhibit ambiguity aversion, discontinuity in valuation from event splitting, and uncertainty effects. In binary choice, when the bivariate attention function is symmetric, AT reduces to Salience Theory and overlaps with skew symmetric bilinear (SSB) correlation preference along with generalized Regret Theory. AT goes beyond SSB correlation preference under asymmetric attention which is necessary and sufficient for Allais behavior in the common-consequence problem. In the presence of substantial non-consequentialist stimuli through bottom-up salience, AT delivers context dependent choice including volatility in loss-gain attitude, source preference, and default bias. Moreover, choice behavior may appear random when the attention function varies with specific stimuli or when the stimuli are themselves stochastic.

About the Speaker

Chew Soo Hong is a Emeritus Professor at the National University of Singapore (NUS) and Professor at the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics. He received his Ph.D. in interdisciplinary studies from the University of British Columbia and has previously taught at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST), University of California, Irvine, Johns Hopkins University and University of Arizona. He is among the pioneers in axiomatic non-expected utility models and is a fellow of the Econometric Society which awarded him the Leonard J. Savage thesis prize. He has previously directed HKUST's Center for Experimental Business Research and is co-director of NUS' Lab for Behavioral x Biological Economics and the Social Sciences which aims to bring together genomics, neuroscience, decision theory, and behavioral and experimental economics to seek a deeper understanding of decision making at the neural and molecular levels. Chew has published in well-regarded journals in economics such as Econometrica, Journal of Political Economy, Review of Economic Studies, Journal of the European Economic Association, and Journal of Economic Theory as well as more biology-oriented ones including Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, Neuron, and Neuroimage.

For enquiries, please contact Shivani Nakhare at 6601 1065 or rminsr@nus.edu.sg