Automated Author Profile

Müller, Wieland

Current S-Index

5.8

Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets

Average Dataset Index per Dataset

1.9

Average Dataset Index per dataset

Total Datasets

3

Total datasets for this author

Average FAIR Score

69.2%

Average FAIR Score per dataset

Total Citations

2

Total citations to the author's datasets

Total Mentions

0

Total mentions of the author's datasets

S-Index Interpretation

S-Index Over Time

Cumulative Citations Over Time

Cumulative Mentions Over Time

Datasets

Replication data for: Who Is (More) Rational? (Version: 1)

Revealed preference theory offers a criterion for decision-making quality: if decisions are high quality then there exists a utility function the choices maximize. We conduct a large-scale experiment to test for consistency with utility maximization. Consistency scores vary markedly within and across socioeconomic groups. In particular, consistency is strongly related to wealth: a standard deviation increase in consistency is associated with 15-19 percent more household wealth. This association is quantitatively robust to conditioning on correlates of unobserved constraints, preferences, and beliefs. Consistency with utility maximization under laboratory conditions thus captures decision-making ability that applies across domains and influences important real-world outcomes.

Authors

  • Choi, Syngjoo ;
  • Kariv, Shachar ;
  • Müller, Wieland ;
  • Silverman, Dan
1 Citation0 Mentions69% FAIR2.0 Dataset Index
10.3886/e116126v1January 2014

Replication data for: Who Is (More) Rational? (Version: V0)

Revealed preference theory offers a criterion for decision-making quality: if decisions are high quality then there exists a utility function the choices maximize. We conduct a large-scale experiment to test for consistency with utility maximization. Consistency scores vary markedly within and across socioeconomic groups. In particular, consistency is strongly related to wealth: a standard deviation increase in consistency is associated with 15-19 percent more household wealth. This association is quantitatively robust to conditioning on correlates of unobserved constraints, preferences, and beliefs. Consistency with utility maximization under laboratory conditions thus captures decision-making ability that applies across domains and influences important real-world outcomes.

Authors

  • Choi, Syngjoo ;
  • Kariv, Shachar ;
  • Müller, Wieland ;
  • Silverman, Dan
1 Citation0 Mentions69% FAIR2.0 Dataset Index
10.3886/e116126January 2014

Replication data for: Who Is (More) Rational? (Version: v1)

Revealed preference theory offers a criterion for decision-making quality: if decisions are high quality then there exists a utility function the choices maximize. We conduct a large-scale experiment to test for consistency with utility maximization. Consistency scores vary markedly within and across socioeconomic groups. In particular, consistency is strongly related to wealth: a standard deviation increase in consistency is associated with 15-19 percent more household wealth. This association is quantitatively robust to conditioning on correlates of unobserved constraints, preferences, and beliefs. Consistency with utility maximization under laboratory conditions thus captures decision-making ability that applies across domains and influences important real-world outcomes.

Authors

  • Choi, Syngjoo ;
  • Kariv, Shachar ;
  • Müller, Wieland ;
  • Silverman, Dan
0 Citations0 Mentions69% FAIR1.7 Dataset Index
10.3886/e116126v1-82360January 2014