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Hot Hand PDF

109 Pages·2012·1.03 MB·English
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Measurement Error and the Hot Hand 1 Daniel F. Stone Oregon State University March 16, 2012 1Special thanks to Zheng Cao.. ◮ Despite near-consensus of players and fans (Gilovich, Tversky and Vallone, 1985) ◮ “The ‘hot hand’ is just a myth” –Thaler and Sunstein (Nudge, 2008) ◮ “There is no hot hand” –Jonah Lehrer (Radiolab, 2009) ◮ “Numerous studies have shown the ‘hot hand’ is just a figment of the imagination” –Berri and Schmidt (Stumbling on Wins, 2010) ◮ “The hot hand is entirely in the eye of the beholders... The hot hand is a massive and widespread cognitive illusion” –Daniel Kahneman (Thinking, Fast and Slow, 2011) The new conventional wisdom in behavioral economics is that the hot hand in basketball doesn’t exist ◮ “The ‘hot hand’ is just a myth” –Thaler and Sunstein (Nudge, 2008) ◮ “There is no hot hand” –Jonah Lehrer (Radiolab, 2009) ◮ “Numerous studies have shown the ‘hot hand’ is just a figment of the imagination” –Berri and Schmidt (Stumbling on Wins, 2010) ◮ “The hot hand is entirely in the eye of the beholders... The hot hand is a massive and widespread cognitive illusion” –Daniel Kahneman (Thinking, Fast and Slow, 2011) The new conventional wisdom in behavioral economics is that the hot hand in basketball doesn’t exist ◮ Despite near-consensus of players and fans (Gilovich, Tversky and Vallone, 1985) ◮ “There is no hot hand” –Jonah Lehrer (Radiolab, 2009) ◮ “Numerous studies have shown the ‘hot hand’ is just a figment of the imagination” –Berri and Schmidt (Stumbling on Wins, 2010) ◮ “The hot hand is entirely in the eye of the beholders... The hot hand is a massive and widespread cognitive illusion” –Daniel Kahneman (Thinking, Fast and Slow, 2011) The new conventional wisdom in behavioral economics is that the hot hand in basketball doesn’t exist ◮ Despite near-consensus of players and fans (Gilovich, Tversky and Vallone, 1985) ◮ “The ‘hot hand’ is just a myth” –Thaler and Sunstein (Nudge, 2008) ◮ “Numerous studies have shown the ‘hot hand’ is just a figment of the imagination” –Berri and Schmidt (Stumbling on Wins, 2010) ◮ “The hot hand is entirely in the eye of the beholders... The hot hand is a massive and widespread cognitive illusion” –Daniel Kahneman (Thinking, Fast and Slow, 2011) The new conventional wisdom in behavioral economics is that the hot hand in basketball doesn’t exist ◮ Despite near-consensus of players and fans (Gilovich, Tversky and Vallone, 1985) ◮ “The ‘hot hand’ is just a myth” –Thaler and Sunstein (Nudge, 2008) ◮ “There is no hot hand” –Jonah Lehrer (Radiolab, 2009) ◮ “The hot hand is entirely in the eye of the beholders... The hot hand is a massive and widespread cognitive illusion” –Daniel Kahneman (Thinking, Fast and Slow, 2011) The new conventional wisdom in behavioral economics is that the hot hand in basketball doesn’t exist ◮ Despite near-consensus of players and fans (Gilovich, Tversky and Vallone, 1985) ◮ “The ‘hot hand’ is just a myth” –Thaler and Sunstein (Nudge, 2008) ◮ “There is no hot hand” –Jonah Lehrer (Radiolab, 2009) ◮ “Numerous studies have shown the ‘hot hand’ is just a figment of the imagination” –Berri and Schmidt (Stumbling on Wins, 2010) The new conventional wisdom in behavioral economics is that the hot hand in basketball doesn’t exist ◮ Despite near-consensus of players and fans (Gilovich, Tversky and Vallone, 1985) ◮ “The ‘hot hand’ is just a myth” –Thaler and Sunstein (Nudge, 2008) ◮ “There is no hot hand” –Jonah Lehrer (Radiolab, 2009) ◮ “Numerous studies have shown the ‘hot hand’ is just a figment of the imagination” –Berri and Schmidt (Stumbling on Wins, 2010) ◮ “The hot hand is entirely in the eye of the beholders... The hot hand is a massive and widespread cognitive illusion” –Daniel Kahneman (Thinking, Fast and Slow, 2011) ◮ ‘Law of small numbers’ -expect small samples to have large sample distributions (Kahneman and Tversky) ◮ Causes tendency to see patterns in random small samples (‘fooled by randomness’) ◮ Now (alleged false belief in hot hand) often cited in behavioral econ lit (Rabin, JEL, 1998) ◮ Sometimes called overinference (DellaVigna, JEL, 2009) ◮ Lots of econ, finance applications Why would people make this mistake? ◮ Causes tendency to see patterns in random small samples (‘fooled by randomness’) ◮ Now (alleged false belief in hot hand) often cited in behavioral econ lit (Rabin, JEL, 1998) ◮ Sometimes called overinference (DellaVigna, JEL, 2009) ◮ Lots of econ, finance applications Why would people make this mistake? ◮ ‘Law of small numbers’ -expect small samples to have large sample distributions (Kahneman and Tversky) ◮ Now (alleged false belief in hot hand) often cited in behavioral econ lit (Rabin, JEL, 1998) ◮ Sometimes called overinference (DellaVigna, JEL, 2009) ◮ Lots of econ, finance applications Why would people make this mistake? ◮ ‘Law of small numbers’ -expect small samples to have large sample distributions (Kahneman and Tversky) ◮ Causes tendency to see patterns in random small samples (‘fooled by randomness’)

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.