Chap 10 8e Frank
Chap 10 8e Frank
Chap 10 8e Frank
D) a satisficer.
A) a boundedly rational agent.
B) a behavioral economist.
C) homo economicus.
D) cognitively
A) highly disciplined. sophisticated.
B) altruistic.
C) well-informed.
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4) In traditional economic models, homo economicus is assumed to be all of the
following except
A) patriotic.
B) narrowly self-interested.
C) cognitively sophisticated.
D) highly disciplined.
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5) In traditional economic models, which of the
following does not describe homo economicus?
D) Cognitively
A) Impulsive sophisticated
B) Narrowly self-interested
C) Well-informed
D) cognitively
A) highly disciplined. naive.
B) narrowly self-interested.
C) well-informed.
D) the adaptive
A) the present-aim standard of rationality. rationality standard.
B) satisficing.
C) loss aversion.
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resources. consumption of others,
B) aims for optimal results in situations where the rather than on absolute
decision maker has perfect information. consumption.
C) attempts to minimize the harm from losses rather
than maximize the pleasure from gains.
D) focuses on how one's consumption compares to the
C) Progressivity
A) Representativeness D) Fungibility
B) Availability
D) each serve a
A) are less valuable when used together. unique purpose.
B) are nearly impossible to identify.
C) are interchangeable.
D) interchangeable.
A) of value for a short period of time.
B) nearly impossible to purchase.
C) useless without the other units.
12) When Tversky and Khaneman asked one group of people to imagine that,
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having previously purchased a ticket for $10, they arrive at lost $10 group said they
the theater to discover they have lost their ticket and a second _____ still attend the
group to imagine that they arrive just before the performance performance.
to buy a ticket and find they have lost $10 from their wallets,
the majority of people in the lost ticket group said they _____
still attend the performance, and the majority of people in the
D) would not;
A) would; would not would
B) would; would
C) would not; would not
D) Both groups
A) The lost ticket group report that they would no
B) The lost $10 group longer go to the
C) Both groups are equally likely to say they would performance.
attend the performance.
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group D) Neither group
B) The lost $10 group should be interested in
C) Both groups should be equally likely to say they attending the performance.
would attend.
D) no longer
A) still attend; the lost $10 group should be more attend; both groups should
likely to say they would still attend be equally likely to say
B) still attend; both groups should be equally likely to they would still attend
say they would still attend
C) no longer attend; the lost $10 group should be more
likely to say they would no longer attend
D) judgmental and
A) optimality constraints. decision heuristics.
B) decision trees.
C) cost-benefit calculations.
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D) used to test the
A) a way of calculating computation costs. rational choice model
B) derived from the rational choice model but imply when computation costs
higher computation costs. are small.
C) rules of thumb that reduce computation costs.
D) availability
A) adjustment heuristic. heuristic.
B) anchoring heuristic.
C) representative heuristic.
D) representative
A) Weber-Fechner law heuristic
B) adaptive rationality standard
C) availability heuristic
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21) According to the availability heuristic, we often
estimate the frequency of an event by
D) less likely to
A) think people frequently receive parking tickets. pay future parking tickets.
B) think people should not receive parking tickets.
C) dislike parking tickets.
24) Suppose Christina just saw an advertisement on since James saw one.
television for an antidepressant, but it has been a long time
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According to the availability heuristic
D) Christina and
A) Christina is likely to think that depression is more James are equally likely to
common than James. think that people recover
B) James is likely to think that depression is more from depression.
common than Christina.
C) Christina and James are likely to think that
depression is equally common.
27) If Haru has just watched a television show in which the main character is killed
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in an airplane crash, then the availability heuristic predicts that he will
D) underestimate
A) more accurately assess the pros and cons of air the dangers of air travel.
travel.
B) never watch that television show again.
C) overestimate the dangers of air travel.
D) availability
A) adjustment heuristic. heuristic.
B) representative heuristic.
C) anchoring heuristic.
D) Weber-Fechner
A) representative heuristic law
B) adaptive rationality standard
C) availability heuristic
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C) decreases with
A) will only rarely be influenced by D) increases with
B) is unaffected by
D) Weber-Fechner
A) adaptive rationality standard law
B) representative heuristic
C) availability heuristic
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34) According to the representative heuristic, people will
tend to think that Kayleigh is a vegetarian if
D) Kayleigh has
A) they themselves are vegetarians. many of the characteristics
B) if the fraction of vegetarians in the population is of a stereotypical
increasing. vegetarian.
C) they have just read a book about vegetarians.
increasing.
A) Yasser has many of the characteristics of a D) they have just
stereotypical beautician. read a book about a
B) they regularly see a beautician. beautician.
C) if the fraction of beauticians in the population is
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D) Delilah has
A) they plan to apply to law school at some point in many of the characteristics
the future. of a stereotypical lawyer.
B) there are few other lawyers living in the same
geographic region.
C) Delilah vehemently denies being a lawyer.
C) 31 percent.
A) 90 percent. D) 18 percent.
B) 80 percent.
40) Suppose that 95 percent of women who are Krista's probability that Krista
age do not have high cholesterol and 5 percent do. If a really does have high
cholesterol test indicates that Krista has high cholesterol, but cholesterol is roughly
the test is only accurate 90 percent of the time, then the
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C) 80 percent.
A) 9.5 percent. D) 32 percent.
B) 68 percent.
C) 10 percent.
A) 18 percent. D) 16 percent
B) 2 percent.
C) 18 percent.
A) 19 percent D) 80 percent.
B) 14.4 percent.
D) fungibility.
A) the adaptive rationality standard.
B) regression to the mean.
C) anchoring and adjustment.
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44) _______ is the phenomenon that unusual events are likely to be followed by
more nearly normal ones.
D) Regression to
A) The present aim standard of rationality the mean
B) Loss aversion
C) Anchoring and adjustment
unusual.
A) likely to be followed by events that are more D) occurring on a
normal. regular basis.
B) unlikely to ever occur in the first place.
C) likely to be followed by events that are even more
D) is unlikely to
A) isn't likely to do as well on the second exam. forget the material she
B) is likely to do even better on the second exam. studied for the exam.
C) is likely to get an A in the class.
C) won’t be as
A) will have a similar plot to his first model.
B) will be even more popular than his first novel.
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popular as his first novel.
D) will be a complete flop.
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48) Last week, Gina's bakery sold fewer cupcakes than
ever before. Regression to the mean implies that the bakery
D) should stop
A) has probably had other bad weeks, but Gina can't selling cupcakes.
remember them.
B) will sell more cupcakes this week.
C) is likely to go out of business.
D) the
A) status quo bias. representative heuristic.
B) regression to the mean.
C) loss aversion.
D) the
A) status quo bias. representative heuristic.
B) regression to the mean.
C) anchoring and adjustment.
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information.
D) Anchoring and
A) The adaptive rationality standard adjustment
B) Status quo bias
C) Regression to the mean
C) too large.
A) in the wrong direction. D) too small.
B) highly accurate.
D) neither the
A) the anchor anchor nor the adjustment
B) the adjustment
C) both the anchor and the adjustment
54) Suppose Evan and Robert are each filling out a Evan and Robert know
separate survey about parking on campus. On Evan's survey, nothing about the parking
the first question asks about whether he thinks the fine for fines on campus, but each
parking illegally on campus should be $50, and on Robert's uses anchoring and
survey the first question asks about whether he thinks the fine adjustment to form his
should be $100. For both Evan and Robert, the second assessment, then, all else
question asks how much each thinks the fine currently is. If equal, you would expect
A) Evan's estimate
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of the current fine to be higher than Robert's. D) Robert's
B) both of them to guess a number between $50 and estimate of the current fine
$100. to be higher than Evan's.
C) their estimates to be identical.
D) regression to the
A) status quo bias. mean.
B) the representative heuristic.
C) the Weber-Fechner law.
57) _______ is the relationship according to which the perceived change in any
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stimulus varies according to the size of the change measured as a proportion of the
original stimulus.
D) Regression to
A) The adaptive rationality standard the mean
B) The Weber-Fechner law
C) The representative heuristic
D) varies
A) depends upon an initial approximation, which is depending upon whether
then updated in accordance with additional information. the change triggers loss
B) depends upon the ease with which it is possible to aversion.
summon similar changes from memory.
C) varies according to the size of the change measured
as a proportion of the original stimulus.
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D) impossible to
A) large. determine.
B) small.
C) zero.
D) impossible to
A) large. determine.
B) small.
C) greater than one.
D) is large in
A) is a rare event. proportion to the original
B) occurs frequently. stimulus.
C) is small in proportion to the original stimulus.
$20.
A) The coupon for the jeans since $100 is greater than B) The coupon for
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the sunglasses since 50 percent is greater than 10 percent. both require driving across
C) They will be seen as equally valuable since both town.
lead to a savings of $10.
D) Neither coupon will be of value to anyone since
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66) Consider two coupons: one offers $10 off a scarf that which coupon will people
costs $20, and the other offers $10 off a jacket that costs tend to perceive as being
$200. Using either coupon requires driving to the shopping more valuable?
mall across town. If the Weber-Fechner law does not hold,
$20.
A) Neither coupon will be of value to anyone since D) They will be
both require driving across town. seen as equally valuable
B) The coupon for the scarf since 50 percent is greater since both lead to a savings
than 5 percent. of $10.
C) The coupon for the jacket since $200 is greater than
D) not be willing to
A) not be willing to drive across town to save 50 drive across town to save
percent on a skateboard with a list price of $100. $20 on a shirt with a list
B) be willing to drive across town to save 50 percent price of $60.
on a book with a list price of $20.
C) be willing to drive across town to save 5 percent on
a bike with a list price of $400.
D) would not be
A) would be willing to drive across town to save $40 willing to drive across
on a skateboard with a list price of $100. town to save $36 on a shirt
B) would not be willing to drive across town to save with a list price of $60.
$25 on a TV with a list price of $500.
C) would be willing to drive across town to save $25
on a video game with a list price of $50.
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69) Suppose Michael is willing to drive across town to
save 40 percent on a sweatshirt with a list price of $80. If
Michael is rational, this implies that he should
D) not be willing to
A) not be willing to drive across town to save 40 drive across town to save
percent on a microwave with a list price of $200. $35 on a shirt with a list
B) be willing to drive across town to save 40 percent price of $70.
on a book with a list price of $30.
C) be willing to drive across town to save 10 percent
on a guitar with a list price of $320.
B) have no impact
A) decrease her likelihood of buying a car. on her choice of A and B.
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C) increase her likelihood of picking A.
D) increase her likelihood of picking B.
D) increase his
A) decrease his likelihood of buying a dishwasher. likelihood of picking B.
B) have no impact on his choice of A and B.
C) increase his likelihood of picking A.
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and is close to her home.
If Natasha behaves like
most decision-makers, then
the addition of option C
would
D) increase her
A) decrease her likelihood of accepting any job. likelihood of picking B.
B) have no impact on her choice of A and B.
C) increase her likelihood of picking A.
73) Brandon is having difficulty deciding between two addition of option Z would
jobs, X and Y. As shown in the accompanying diagram, X
entails a greater risk of injury than Y but pays more. Ideally,
Brandon would like a job that both pays well and does not
entail a high risk of injury.
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D) increase his
A) decrease his likelihood of accepting any job. likelihood of picking X.
B) increase his likelihood of picking Y.
C) have no impact on his choice of X and Y.
D) what the
A) why people experience regret. rational choice should be.
B) how people maximize their utility.
C) how risk aversion influences decisions.
C) cannot explain
A) account for D) are supported by
B) can easily explain
D) is a core
A) suggests that people like to be unhappy. assumption upon which
B) is a natural prediction of many traditional economic traditional economic
models. models are built.
C) cannot be explained by traditional economic
models.
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77) Impulse-control problems can arise when people
D) regression to the
A) the availability heuristic. mean.
B) loss aversion.
C) the present-aim standard of rationality.
D) anchoring and
A) status quo bias. adjustment.
B) satisficing.
C) the representativeness heuristic.
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D) Loss aversion
A) The availability heuristic
B) Fungibility
C) The present-aim standard of rationality
D) dislike gains,
A) weigh losses more heavily than gains. but enjoy losses.
B) weigh gains more heavily than losses.
C) enjoy gains, but dislike losses.
modified in accordance
A) estimates the frequency of an event by the ease with additional available
with which it is possible to summon examples from memory. information.
D) permits greater
B) aims for adequate results because optimal results flexibility in assumptions
may necessitate excessive expenditure of resources. about preferences.
C) begins with an initial approximation, which is then
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84) Suppose Whitney is willing to pay $200 to buy a new
phone. Loss aversion implies that if Whitney already had just
bought the phone, you would
D) not be able to
A) have to pay her less than $200 to part with it. get her to part with it for
B) have to pay her more than $200 to part with it. any amount of money.
C) have to pay her exactly $200 to part with it.
D) not be able to
A) have to pay him less than $350 to part with it. get him to part with it for
B) have to pay him more than $350 to part with it. any amount of money.
C) have to pay him exactly $350 to part with it.
D) no longer be
A) be willing to pay more than $150 for it. interested in purchasing it.
B) be willing to pay less than $150 for it.
C) be willing to pay exactly $150 for it.
87) Suppose you would have to pay Troy at least $12 to would
get him to part with his new water bottle. Loss aversion
implies that if Troy had not yet purchased the water bottle, he
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D) no longer be
A) be willing to pay more than $12 to buy it. interested in buying it.
B) be willing to pay exactly $12 to buy it.
C) be willing to pay less than $12 to buy it.
C) more than
A) unrelated to the amount D) less than
B) the same as
D) weigh losses
A) are unable to assess the relative value of gains and more heavily than gains.
losses.
B) place equal weight on gains and losses.
C) weigh gains more heavily than losses.
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91) The general resistance to change, often stemming from loss aversion, is known as
D) the Weber-
A) status quo bias. Fechner law.
B) regression to the mean.
C) the present aim standard of rationality.
D) Anchoring and
A) Status quo bias adjustment
B) Regression to the mean
C) The present aim standard of rationality
D) inefficiency that
A) general enthusiasm for change, often stemming stems from anchoring and
from regression to the mean. adjustment.
B) general resistance to change, often stemming from
loss aversion.
C) inefficiency that stems from constant change.
D) anchoring and
A) status quo bias. adjustment.
B) regression to the mean.
C) fungibility.
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95) When it comes to enacting policy changes, loss
aversion often leads to status quo bias because
D) the resistance
A) people's estimates of their gains from the policy are from those who stand to
often too large. lose from the policy often
B) people's estimate of their losses from the policy are overwhelms the support
often too small. from those who stand to
C) the support from those who stand to gain from the gain.
policy often overwhelms the resistance from those who stand
to lose.
D) easy to identify
A) difficult to enact policy changes. which policies involve the
B) easy to enact policy changes. largest efficiency gains.
C) difficult to identify those who stand to lose from
policy changes.
anonymously.
A) some people buy expensive cars and others buy D) people buy
cheap cars. more of certain goods
B) people leave tips at restaurants where they when their income falls.
regularly dine.
C) people donate money to charity completely
98) The present aim standard of rationality accommodates a much _______ range of
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observed behavior than traditional economic models, but has been criticized because the
model is too _______.
D) narrower;
A) narrower; flexible inflexible
B) broader; inflexible
C) broader; flexible
D) present aim
A) adaptive rationality standard standard of rationality
B) availability heuristic
C) ultimatum bargaining game
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their narrow self-interest.
A) assumes that people's goals are a choice variable. D) can be used to
B) only accounts for a narrow range of observed "explain" virtually any
behavior. bizarre behavior.
C) cannot explain why people do things that are not in
D) fixed, and
A) a choice variable, and people may not be efficient people are often inefficient
at choosing which goals to pursue. at pursuing those goals,
B) a choice variable, and people's choices about which which explains why people
goals to pursue are made efficiently. experience regret.
C) fixed, and people are efficient at pursuing whatever
goals they happen to hold at the moment of action.
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D) standard rational
A) present aim standard of rationality choice model
B) adaptive rationality standard
C) Weber-Fechner law
have.
A) are irrational if they choose to have preferences D) might rationally
that are not self-interested. choose to have preferences
B) always behave according to their own narrow self- that are not self-interested.
interest.
C) are unable to choose what kind of preferences to
D) they have no
A) people sometimes make irrational choices. other choice.
B) doing so could be in their own best interest.
C) they do not know how to make efficient choices.
C) they do not
A) even rational people sometimes make irrational
choices.
B) doing so could help them solve commitment
problems.
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know how to act in their own self-interest.
D) they have no other choice.
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108) The _______ is a game in which the first player has
the power to confront the second player with a take-it-or-
leave-it offer.
D) repeated
A) Nash bargaining game prisoner's dilemma
B) matching pennies game
C) ultimatum bargaining game
D) repeated
A) ultimatum bargaining game. prisoner's dilemma.
B) matching pennies game.
C) Nash bargaining game.
other player.
A) the second player doesn't know the strategy choice D) both players
of the first player. give each other an
B) the first player confronts the second player with a ultimatum.
take-it-or-leave-it offer.
C) both players have a dominant strategy to cheat the
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bargaining game, standard economic theory would predict that the Responder should
D) only accept an
A) reject any amount over $50. offer for exactly $50.
B) accept any amount offered by the Proposer.
C) reject any amount less than $50.
D) the smallest
A) exactly $25. dollar amount possible.
B) exactly $50.
C) the largest dollar amount possible.
economic theory.
A) nothing. D) less than would
B) exactly the amount that would be predicted by be predicted by standard
economic theory. economic theory.
C) more than would be predicted by standard
A) acting in their
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own narrow self-interest. D) not
B) valuing fairness. understanding the game.
C) behaving irrationally.
C) are deceitful.
A) act in their own narrow self-interest. D) value fairness.
B) have impulse control problems.
D) relative
A) neither absolute nor relative consumption. consumption.
B) both absolute and relative consumption.
C) absolute consumption.
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118) If people care about relative consumption rather than absolute consumption, then
resources.
A) their behavior will be consistent with traditional D) individuals'
economic models. decisions need not lead to
B) there is little need for government intervention in socially optimal outcomes.
markets.
C) their choices will lead to an efficient allocation of
D) impulse-control
A) regression to the mean. problems.
B) status quo bias.
C) anchoring and adjustment.
D) decrease
A) are designed to take advantage of the flaws in the economic efficiency if
availability heuristic. people have impulse-
B) help mitigate regression to the mean in most cases. control problems.
C) increase welfare if people discount the future too
heavily.
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C) satisficing good.
A) nonpositional good. D) fungible good.
B) positional good.
D) a heuristic good.
A) a nonpositional good.
B) a satisficing good.
C) a positional good.
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Answer Key
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20) B
21) D
22) A
23) D
24) A
25) D
26) C
27) C
28) B
29) A
30) D
31) C
32) B
33) B
34) D
35) A
36) A
37) D
38) B
39) C
40) D
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41) D
42) A
43) B
44) D
45) A
46) A
47) C
48) B
49) B
50) C
51) D
52) D
53) A
54) D
55) B
56) C
57) B
58) C
59) B
60) A
61) B
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62) D
63) B
64) B
65) A
66) D
67) C
68) B
69) C
70) C
71) C
72) D
73) B
74) A
75) C
76) C
77) B
78) B
79) D
80) D
81) B
82) A
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83) D
84) B
85) B
86) B
87) C
88) C
89) C
90) D
91) A
92) A
93) B
94) A
95) D
96) A
97) C
98) C
99) D
100) B
101) D
102) A
103) B
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104) B
105) D
106) B
107) B
108) C
109) A
110) B
111) B
112) D
113) C
114) B
115) D
116) C
117) B
118) D
119) D
120) C
121) A
122) A
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