2000
DOI: 10.1111/1468-0262.00127
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Sharing Beliefs: Between Agreeing and Disagreeing

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Cited by 108 publications
(125 citation statements)
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“…See for instance Dow and Werlang (1992), Epstein and Wang (1994), Tallon (1998), Billot, Chateauneuf, Gilboa, and Tallon (2000), Chateauneuf, Dana, and Tallon (2000), Mukerji and Tallon (2001), Dana (2002), Abouda and Chateauneuf (2002), Dana (2004), Rigotti and Shannon (2005), Asano (2006), Rigotti and Shannon (2007), Rigotti, Shannon, and Strzalecki (2008) and Strzalecki and Werner (2011). 4,5 We discuss in more detail three of these papers which seem closer related to our results.…”
Section: Related Literaturesupporting
confidence: 73%
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“…See for instance Dow and Werlang (1992), Epstein and Wang (1994), Tallon (1998), Billot, Chateauneuf, Gilboa, and Tallon (2000), Chateauneuf, Dana, and Tallon (2000), Mukerji and Tallon (2001), Dana (2002), Abouda and Chateauneuf (2002), Dana (2004), Rigotti and Shannon (2005), Asano (2006), Rigotti and Shannon (2007), Rigotti, Shannon, and Strzalecki (2008) and Strzalecki and Werner (2011). 4,5 We discuss in more detail three of these papers which seem closer related to our results.…”
Section: Related Literaturesupporting
confidence: 73%
“…For the insurance case, we obtain a version of the main results of Billot, Chateauneuf, Gilboa, and Tallon (2000) and Rigotti, Shannon, and Strzalecki (2008) for situations where the aggregate endowment is not constant. Our result shows the equivalence of a common conditional prior and that Pareto optimal allocations are unambiguous.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 70%
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“…It can also explain why at times of greater volatility one may …nd lower volumes of trade: with a larger set of probabilities that are considered possible, there will be more DMs who prefer neither to buy nor to sell. 76 The question of trade among uncertainty averse agents has been also studied in Billot, Chateauneuf, Gilboa and Tallon (2000), Kajii and Ui (2006), and Rigotti, Shannon, and Strzalecki (2008. Epstein and Miao (2003) use uncertainty aversion to explain the home bias phenomenon in international …nance, namely, the observation that people prefer to trade stocks of their own country rather than foreign ones.…”
Section: Applicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%