Results 291 to 300 of about 873,320 (341)
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SSRN Electronic Journal, 2018
This paper sheds light on the choice of framing in investors’ portfolio decisions by exploiting variations in the disposition effect—specifically, we examine how investors trade in response to stock-level versus portfolio-level gains. First, we show that the disposition effect is stronger when the portfolio is at a loss and nearly disappears when the ...
Li An, Baolian Wang
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This paper sheds light on the choice of framing in investors’ portfolio decisions by exploiting variations in the disposition effect—specifically, we examine how investors trade in response to stock-level versus portfolio-level gains. First, we show that the disposition effect is stronger when the portfolio is at a loss and nearly disappears when the ...
Li An, Baolian Wang
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Accountability and the mental health services
British Journal of Nursing, 1994The consultation paper Guidance on the Discharge of Mentally Disordered People and Their Continuing Care in the Community (Department of Health, 1994) is the cynical reaction to bad publicity on the care of the mentally ill in the community. It makes no attempt to address serious failings in the mental health service.
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Goals and bracketing under mental accounting
Journal of Economic Theory, 2016zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Alexander K. Koch, Julia Nafziger
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Accountability in mental health nursing
British Journal of Nursing, 1994Professionalisation of nursing has played a part in making accountability more implicit for nurses in terms of clinical autonomy. Mental health nurses therefore need to be clear about the principles on which they base their practice. This article considers these issues in terms of ethics, the client's perspective and clinical implications.
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Uncertain portfolio selection with mental accounts
International Journal of Systems Science, 2020Since the security market is so complex, in real life, there are situations where the future security returns cannot be reflected by the past data and are given by experts' estimations according to...
Xiaoxia Huang, Hao Di
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Mental Accounting in Childhood
Citizenship, Social and Economics Education, 1998The purpose of this study was to investigate the development of mental accounts. Of particular concern was how mental accounts function in the everyday life of children and how children deal with money matters. Sixty children from three age groups (5–6, 8–9 and 11–12) were individually interviewed about their financial situation (e.g. sources of money,
Paul Webley, Zarrea Plaisier
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This chapter explores the concept of “mental accounting,” first introduced by Richard Thaler, and its influence on financial behaviors. It aims to understand how mental categorization of finances affects decisions related to spending, saving, and debt management.
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Journal of Economic Psychology, 2009
This paper examines the ways in which time is perceived and tracked. We investigate whether people create mental accounts for time like they do for money, how time is allotted to these accounts and if time is valued differently according to the account to which it is assigned. Across five studies, we find evidence that people create mental accounts for
Priyali Rajagopal, Jong-Youn Rha
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This paper examines the ways in which time is perceived and tracked. We investigate whether people create mental accounts for time like they do for money, how time is allotted to these accounts and if time is valued differently according to the account to which it is assigned. Across five studies, we find evidence that people create mental accounts for
Priyali Rajagopal, Jong-Youn Rha
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The Review of Financial Studies, 2015
When investors sell one asset and quickly buy another (“reinvestment days”), their trades suggest the original mental account is not closed, but is instead rolled into the new asset. Investors display a rolled disposition effect, selling the new position when its value exceeds the investment in the original position.
Cary Frydman +2 more
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When investors sell one asset and quickly buy another (“reinvestment days”), their trades suggest the original mental account is not closed, but is instead rolled into the new asset. Investors display a rolled disposition effect, selling the new position when its value exceeds the investment in the original position.
Cary Frydman +2 more
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Mental Accounting and the Marginal Propensity to Consume
SSRN Electronic Journal, 2022This paper studies how and why consumers respond to unexpected, transitory income shocks. In a randomized control trial, I elicit marginal propensities to consume (MPC) out of different hypothetical income shock scenarios, varying the payment mode, the shock size, and the source of income.
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