Economic rationality under cognitive load

Economic rationality under cognitive load

Speaker
Andreas Drichoutis - Agricultural University of Athens

Date
Jul 3, 2018 - Time: 11:00 Dipartimento di EconomiaAziendale (II piano), Aula 2.3



Andreas Drichoutis
Agricultural University of Athens

Rodolfo M. Nayga Jr.
University of Arkansas

 

Economic analysis assumes that consumer behavior can be rationalized by a utility function. Previous research has shown that some decision-making quality can be captured by permanent cognitive ability but has not examined how a temporary load in subjects' working memory can affect economic rationality.
In a controlled laboratory experiment, we exogenously vary cognitive load by asking subjects to memorize a number while they undertake an induced budget allocation task (Choi et al. 2007a,b). Using a number of manipulation checks, we verify that cognitive load has adverse effects on subjects' performance in reasoning tasks. However, we find no effect in any of the goodness-of-fit measures that measure consistency of subjects' choices with the Generalized Axiom of Revealed Preference (GARP), despite having a sample size large enough to detect even small differences between treatments with 80% power.
Our finding suggests that researchers need not worry about economic rationality breaking down when subjects are placed under temporary working memory load.

Data pubblicazione
Jun 26, 2018

Contact person
Claudia Bazzani
Department
Management