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Attention Utility: Evidence from Individual Investors

Edika Quispe-Torreblanca1; John Gathergood2; George Loewenstein3; Neil Stewart4

1 Leeds University Business School · 2 School of Economics, University of Nottingham; Network for Integrated Behavioural Science , · 3 Social and Decision Sciences, Carnegie Mellon University , · 4 Warwick Business School, University of Warwick; Network for Integrated Behavioural Science ,

Review of Economic Studies 2026 open access

Abstract We study attention utility, the hedonic pleasure or pain derived purely from paying attention to information, which differs from the news utility that arises from gaining new information. The main, field, study examines brokerage account login data to show that investors pay disproportionate attention to already-known positive information on their stocks. Through its effect on logins, this selective attention affects their trading activity. Three experimental studies then show that (1) investors are more likely to engage in a paid task that will involve attention to a prior investment if that investment has gained value; (2) paying attention to a winning stock is more motivating than a doubling of monetary incentives; and that (3) attention has value independent of information acquisition.

DOI
10.1093/restud/rdaf028
Volume
93 (1)
Pages
664-696
Language
en
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