Motivating Innovation: The Effect of Loss Aversion on the Willingness to Persist
The Review of Economics and Statistics
2020
open access
Abstract We investigate the willingness of individuals to persist at exploration when confronted by prolonged periods of negative feedback. We design a two-dimensional maze game and run a series of randomized experiments with human subjects in the game. Our results suggest individuals explore more when they are reminded of the incremental cost of their actions, a result that extends prior research on loss aversion and prospect theory to environments characterized by model uncertainty. In addition, we run simulations based on a model of reinforcement learning that extend beyond two-period models of decision making to account for repeated behavior in longer-running, dynamic contexts.
- DOI
- 10.1162/rest_a_00846
- Volume
- 102 (3)
- Pages
- 569-582
- Language
- en
- Export
- BibTeX
- Sources
- openalex crossref