Prof. Dr. Herbert Dawid
Postal Address:
Universität Bielefeld
Fakultät für Wirtschaftswissenschaften
Universitätsstr. 25
D-33615 Bielefeld
Contact:
Tel.: +49 521 106-6931
E-mail: etace(et)uni-bielefeld.de
Plenary Talk
02.09.2024
Herbert Dawid will give a keynote talk on "The Effect of Algorithmic Decision Making in Markets" on September 2, 2024 at the HEDGE (Health, Environment, Development and Growth Economics: New Perspective and Challenges) conference in Pisa.
Paper published in Management Science
02.09.2024
Huberts, N., Wen, X., Dawid, H., Huisman K. and P.M. Kort (2024), 'Double Marginalization Because of External Financing: Capacity Investment Under Uncertainty, published online in Management Science.
Plenary Talk
17.06.2024
On June 20, 2024 Herbert Dawid will give a plenary talk at the 30th International Conference on Computing in Economics and Finance on "The Effect of Algorithmic Decision Making in Markets".
Abstract: Rational inattention models characterize optimal decision-making in data-rich environments. In such environments, it can be costly to look carefully at all of the information. Some information is much more salient for the decision at hand and merits closer scrutiny. The inattention decision model formalizes this choice and deduces how best to navigate through the potentially vast array of data when making decisions. In the rational formulation, the decision-maker commits fully to a subjective prior distribution over the possible states of the world that could be realized. We relax this assumption and look for a robustly optimal solution to the inattention problem by allowing the decision-maker to be ambiguity averse with respect to this prior. In comparison to the rational solution with no prior uncertainty, our decision-maker slants priors in more cautious or pessimistic directions when deducing how to allocate attention over the range of available information. We explore some examples that show how the robust solution differs from the rational solution with a commitment to a subjective prior distribution and how it differs from imposing risk aversion. This is a joint work with Lars Peter Hansen and Jianjun Miao.