“…These (and other DMfO) studies vary widely in their methodologies, with some using only hypothetical questions, some framing DMfO as advice, some framing DMfO as predictions of others' behavior, some providing financial incentives for decision-makers, some involving decisions for or by groups, etc. In the risk literature, the reported self-other discrepancies are similarly varied: some find lower risk-aversion in DMfO (Agranov et al, 2014;Chakravarty et al, 2011;Lee, 2018;Polman, 2012;and Pollmann et al, 2014), and some higher (Bolton & Ockenfels, 2010;Charness & Jackson, 2009;Eriksen & Kvaløy, 2010;Eriksen et al, 2017;Füllbrunn & Luhan, 2015;Pahlke et al, 2015;and Reynolds et al, 2009). Perhaps unsurprisingly, given such mixed results, Ericksen et al (2017) find increased variance in DMfO risk aversion.…”