Authors: Arnold S. Wood, Amos Tversky, Werner F.M. De Bondt, Meir Stateman, Leslie Shaw, Russell J. Fuller, Richard S. Pzena, David N. Dreman, Horace Woody Brock
Title: Behavioral Finance and Decision Theory in Investment Management
Published: 1995
Cover: No
Format: PDF
Quality: Good
Website: [Dear Guest/Member you can't see link before click here to register]
About this book:
AIMR Conference Proceedings
These presentations are among those given at the first AIMR conference to focus on the application of decision theory and Behavioral studies to financial and market issues. They offer insights into explaining the anomalies that continue to baffle the Investment profession and dealing with the disappointing performance of active Investment management. From the world of academics and the world of practice, major investigators of decision theory and Behavioral finance analyze and contrast the world view of rational economic models and efficient markets with the human factors that influence the markets—how people act on information and when, the normal human tendencies that create biases, cognitive illusions that affect decision making, and the principal–agent relationship. Proceedings of the seminar "Improving the Investment Decision-Making Process: Behavioral Finance and Decision Theory"
Title: Behavioral Finance and Decision Theory in Investment Management
Published: 1995
Cover: No
Format: PDF
Quality: Good
Website: [Dear Guest/Member you can't see link before click here to register]
About this book:
AIMR Conference Proceedings
These presentations are among those given at the first AIMR conference to focus on the application of decision theory and Behavioral studies to financial and market issues. They offer insights into explaining the anomalies that continue to baffle the Investment profession and dealing with the disappointing performance of active Investment management. From the world of academics and the world of practice, major investigators of decision theory and Behavioral finance analyze and contrast the world view of rational economic models and efficient markets with the human factors that influence the markets—how people act on information and when, the normal human tendencies that create biases, cognitive illusions that affect decision making, and the principal–agent relationship. Proceedings of the seminar "Improving the Investment Decision-Making Process: Behavioral Finance and Decision Theory"