A) offer the same relative split ($800/$200) , knowing that Henry will accept the offer because the dollar amount he would forgo by rejecting it is substantial.
B) offer a more unequal split ($900/$100) in order to gain more for herself and figuring Henry will accept the split because $100 is better than nothing.
C) offer a more equal split ($700/$300) to increase the probability that Henry will accept the offer.
D) offer Henry more than half of the pot to ensure acceptance of the offer.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) heuristics.
B) specificity.
C) modularity.
D) myopia.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) are able to make better predictions about economic behaviors and outcomes.
B) ignore the mental processes by which these decisions are made.
C) believe that people never make suboptimal decisions.
D) believe it is best to limit the number of options people have available.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) Self-interest dominates human behavior; even seemingly selfless behavior is driven by self-interest.
B) Most people care so deeply about others that self-interest is a minor consideration in their decision making.
C) The system is most efficient when people focus solely on their self-interest and allow the invisible hand to work out what is best for society.
D) People are always self-interested to a degree, but their behavior is also affected by moral and ethical considerations.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) provides useful information that improves consumers' ability to make decisions.
B) exploits the self-serving bias.
C) exploits the recognition heuristic.
D) quickly communicates price changes that exploit the law of demand.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) efficient and accurate.
B) efficient but prone to err ors.
C) inefficient but accurate.
D) inefficient and prone to errors.
Correct Answer
verified
True/False
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) weighed the costs and benefits and made a rational economic decision to sleep in.
B) used System 1 of her brain to formulate her workout plan, but then gave in to System 2 when she chose to sleep in.
C) used System 2 of her brain to formulate her workout plan, but then gave in to System 1 when she chose to sleep in.
D) is fundamentally lazy and incapable of sticking to a workout plan.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) giving them more options, just like the belief of neoclassical economists.
B) giving them more options, contrary to the belief of neoclassical economists.
C) getting them to select better from the same set of options as they had initially.
D) requiring them to follow an externally determined best choice among their options.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) it is sometimes difficult for people to correct detrimental behaviors or routines.
B) people may be vulnerable to others who understand their hardwired tendencies.
C) heuristics make people consistently behave in a rational manner.
D) people may make behavioral changes if they're exposed to a situation where a heuristic kicks in and starts driving their decision.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) anchoring effect.
B) endowment effect.
C) status quo bias.
D) confirmation bias.
Correct Answer
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True/False
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) planning fallacy.
B) framing effect.
C) hindsight bias.
D) availability heuristic.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) are rules of thumb that generate decisions that generally maximize net benefits.
B) take a long time to develop and are therefore avoided by rational decision makers.
C) are shortcuts that save time and energy in decision making.
D) always waste mental resources by leading people to suboptimal outcomes.
Correct Answer
verified
True/False
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) people are willing to pay more for things they don't own than they would have to receive to give up something they already have.
B) people feel gains and losses with equal intensity.
C) people assign higher values to things they own than things they don't.
D) the intensity of feelings from gains and losses depends on how much wealth one possesses.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) planning fallacy.
B) confirmation bias.
C) framing effect.
D) availability heuristic.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) some people cannot correct a personal trait that might be causing them to fail in many ventures.
B) someone could persist in pursuing a failed policy despite overwhelming evidence of the failure.
C) bad decisions can be made because people will act without pausing to see whether their intuition is correct or not.
D) some people may wrongly believe in their forecasting ability to predict future outcomes of risky investments.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) framing effects.
B) confirmation bias.
C) self-serving bias.
D) planning fallacy.
Correct Answer
verified
True/False
Correct Answer
verified
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