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arxiv: 2205.10434 · v2 · pith:CQ3OULA4 · submitted 2022-05-20 · econ.TH

Predicting Choice from Information Costs

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classification econ.TH
keywords agentcostschoicecostinformationresultacquiresactions
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An agent acquires a costly flexible signal before making a decision. We explore to what degree knowledge of the agent's information costs helps predict her behavior. We establish an impossibility result: learning costs alone generate no testable restrictions on choice without also imposing constraints on actions' state-dependent utilities. By contrast, choices from a menu often uniquely pin down the agent's decisions in all submenus. To prove the latter result, we define iteratively differentiable cost functions, a tractable class amenable to first-order techniques. Finally, we construct tight tests for a multi-menu data set to be consistent with a given cost.

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Cited by 1 Pith paper

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Attention and Social Learning

    econ.TH 2026-06 unverdicted novelty 5.0

    Lab experiment finds most subjects fail to infer higher accuracy from stronger incentives and do not adjust their own attention when paired with low-incentive peers, inconsistent with costly information acquisition models.