Skill or Luck? Biases of Rational Agents
Author(s)
Van den Steen, Eric
DownloadSkill or Luck 4255-02.pdf (481.9Kb)
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This paper shows why, in a world with differing priors, rational agents tend to
attribute their own success more to skill and their failure more to bad luck than an
outsider. It further shows why each agent in a group might think he or she is the
best, why an agent might overestimate the control he has over the outcome, and why
two agents? estimated contributions often add up to more than 100%. Underlying
all these phenomena is a simple and robust mechanism that endogenously generates
overoptimism about one?s own actions. The paper also shows how these biases hinder
learning and discusses some implications for organizations.
Date issued
2002-09-24Series/Report no.
MIT Sloan School of Management Working Paper;4255-02
Keywords
rational agents, heterogeneous priors, attribution and inference bias, behavioral bias, overconfidence, self-serving bias