On the Causes and Consequences of Deviations from Rational Behavior

63 Pages Posted: 10 Jun 2020

See all articles by Dainis Zegners

Dainis Zegners

Erasmus Univeristy Rotterdam School of Management

Uwe Sunde

Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (LMU) - Faculty of Economics

Anthony Strittmatter

CREST-ENSAE

Date Written: 2020

Abstract

This paper presents a novel approach to analyze human decision-making that involves comparing the behavior of professional chess players relative to a computational benchmark of cognitively bounded rationality. This benchmark is constructed using algorithms of modern chess engines and allows investigating behavior at the level of individual move-by-move observations, thus representing a natural benchmark for computationally bounded optimization. The analysis delivers novel insights by isolating deviations from this benchmark of bounded rationality as well as their causes and consequences for performance. The findings document the existence of several distinct dimensions of behavioral deviations, which are related to asymmetric positional evaluation in terms of losses and gains, time pressure, fatigue, and complexity. The results also document that deviations from the benchmark do not necessarily entail worse performance. Faster decisions are associated with more frequent deviations from the benchmark, yet they are also associated with better performance. The findings are consistent with an important influence of intuition and experience, thereby shedding new light on the recent debate about computational rationality in cognitive processes.

JEL Classification: D010, D900, C700, C800

Suggested Citation

Zegners, Dainis and Sunde, Uwe and Strittmatter, Anthony, On the Causes and Consequences of Deviations from Rational Behavior (2020). CESifo Working Paper No. 8341, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3623676 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3623676

Dainis Zegners (Contact Author)

Erasmus Univeristy Rotterdam School of Management ( email )

Uwe Sunde

Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (LMU) - Faculty of Economics ( email )

Ludwigstrasse 28
Munich, D-80539
Germany

Anthony Strittmatter

CREST-ENSAE ( email )

France

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