Université de Lausanne
Ecole des HEC
Département d'économétrie et d'économie politique
Thursday March 19, 2009, 13:00
Extranef, Dorigny, room 126
Markus GLASER
(University of Mannheim, Germany)
Overconfidence of
Professionals and Lay Men:
Individual Differences Within and Between Tasks?
Abstract
Overconfidence
can manifest itself in various forms. For example, people think that their
knowledge is more precise than it really is (miscalibration)
and they believe that their abilities are above average (better than average
effect). The questions whether judgment biases are related or whether stable
individual differences in the degree of overconfidence exist,
have long been unexplored. In this paper, we present two studies that analyze
whether professional traders or investment bankers who work for international
banks are prone to judgment biases to the same degree as a population of lay
men. We examine whether there are robust individual differences in the degree
of overconfidence within various tasks. Furthermore, we analyze whether the
degree of judgment biases is correlated across tasks. Based on the answers of
123 professionals, we find that expert judgment is biased. In most tasks, their
degrees of overconfidence are significantly higher than the respective scores
of a student control group. In line with the literature, we find stable
individual differences within tasks (e.g. in the degree of miscalibration).
However, we find that correlations across distinct tasks are sometimes
insignificant or even negative. We conclude that some manifestations of
overconfidence, that are often argued to be related, are actually unrelated.
Web site of the seminar (with paper online): http://www.hec.unil.ch/deep/evenements-english/e-sem-all-2008-09.htm