Back to History

Fields Changed

Registration

Field Before After
Abstract This study is meant to examine the nature of the asymmetric dominance effect and test a few recent economic models that accommodate this behavioral regularity. To reach this goal we extend the standard experimental framework of asymmetric dominance by introducing subjects with multiple decoy options in different locations. This study is meant to examine the nature of the asymmetric dominance effect. To reach this goal we extend the standard experimental framework of asymmetric dominance by introducing subjects with multiple decoy options in different locations. As a side effect we may be able to hint as to which type of economic models is more fitting to account for this behavioral phenomenon.
Trial Start Date April 03, 2019 June 26, 2019
Trial End Date September 01, 2019 July 31, 2019
Last Published April 06, 2019 03:19 PM June 26, 2019 04:35 AM
Intervention Start Date April 03, 2019 June 26, 2019
Intervention End Date April 14, 2019 July 31, 2019
Planned Number of Observations About 450 About 500-600
Sample size (or number of clusters) by treatment arms Roughly 90 subjects in each of the five treatments. This amounts to roughly 90 per choice set in context 1 (where there are 5 different choice sets), and roughly 110 per choice set in contexts 2 and 3 (where there are 4 different choice sets). Roughly 125-150 subjects in each of the four treatments.
Back to top