COWLES FOUNDATION FOR RESEARCH IN
ECONOMICS
AT YALE UNIVERSITY
Box 208281
New Haven, CT 06520-8281

COWLES FOUNDATION DISCUSSION PAPER NO. 1890
Testing for Fictive Learning in Decision-Making under
Uncertainty
Oliver Bunn, Caterina Calsamiglia and Donald Brown
March 2013
We conduct two experiments where subjects make a sequence of binary
choices between risky and ambiguous binary lotteries. Risky lotteries are defined as
lotteries where the relative frequencies of outcomes are known. Ambiguous lotteries are
lotteries where the relative frequencies of outcomes are not known or may not exist. The
trials in each experiment are divided into three phases: pre-treatment, treatment and
post-treatment.
The trials in the pre-treatment and post-treatment phases are the same. As such, the
trials before and after the treatment phase are dependent, clustered matched-pairs, that
we analyze with the alternating logistic regression (ALR) package in SAS. In both
experiments, we reveal to each subject the outcomes of her actual and counterfactual
choices in the treatment phase. The treatments differ in the complexity of the random
process used to generate the relative frequencies of the payoffs of the ambiguous
lotteries. In the first experiment, the probabilities can be inferred from the converging
sample averages of the observed actual and counterfactual outcomes of the ambiguous
lotteries. In the second experiment the sample averages do not converge.
If we define fictive learning in an experiment as statistically significant changes in the
responses of subjects before and after the treatment phase of an experiment, then we
expect fictive learning in the first experiment, but no fictive learning in the second
experiment. The surprising finding in this paper is the presence of fictive learning in
the second experiment. We attribute this counterintuitive result to apophenia:
"seeing meaningful patterns in meaningless or random data." A refinement of this
result is the inference from a subsequent Chi-squared test, that the effects of fictive
learning in the first experiment are significantly different from the effects of fictive
learning in the second experiment.
JEL Classification: C23, C35, C91, D03
Keywords: Uncertainty, Counterfactual outcomes, Apophenia |