| Literature DB >> 32979183 |
Sangil Lee1,2, Chris M Glaze3, Eric T Bradlow4, Joseph W Kable3.
Abstract
In intertemporal and risky choice decisions, parametric utility models are widely used for predicting choice and measuring individuals' impulsivity and risk aversion. However, parametric utility models cannot describe data deviating from their assumed functional form. We propose a novel method using cubic Bezier splines (CBS) to flexibly model smooth and monotonic utility functions that can be fit to any dataset. CBS shows higher descriptive and predictive accuracy over extant parametric models and can identify common yet novel patterns of behavior that are inconsistent with extant parametric models. Furthermore, CBS provides measures of impulsivity and risk aversion that do not depend on parametric model assumptions.Entities:
Keywords: flexible modeling; generalized utility functions; heterogeneity; intertemporal choice; risky choice
Year: 2020 PMID: 32979183 PMCID: PMC7599200 DOI: 10.1007/s11336-020-09723-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychometrika ISSN: 0033-3123 Impact factor: 2.500
Fig. 1Three classes of modeling approaches in ITC & RC. Outlined above are characteristics of three different classes of modeling approaches to intertemporal choice and risky choice data. Parametric and fully non-parametric approaches have multiple tradeoffs in theoretical motivation, interpretability, flexibility, and required amount of data. Structured non-parametric approaches try to strike a balance between these two approaches
Survey of commonly used ITC and RC models
| Intertemporal choice models | Form name | Utility function | Approx. by CBS |
|---|---|---|---|
| Samuelson ( | Exponential (E) | Y | |
| Mazur ( | Hyperbolic (H) | Y | |
| Green et al. ( | Generalized Hyperbolic (Gh) | Y | |
| Roelofsma ( | Log Time (Lt) | Y | |
| Laibson ( | Quasi-hyperbolic (Q) | Y | |
| McClure et al. ( | Double Exponential (De) | Y |
Each row shows, from left to right, the reference of the parametric model, the name of the form (with short abbreviation), the model specification, and whether the model can be approximated by a CBS function of the form in this paper. Across all ITC models, utility is expressed as a product of A, the amount of the delayed outcome, and f(D), which is a function of the delay (we are assuming a linear utility for amount in ITC; to the extent to which this assumption is violated, the functions we estimate will incorporate influences of both amount and delay transformations, much like some of the RC models). In RC models, A is the amount of the risky outcome, p is the probability of winning that outcome. We only show here the model forms for a simple gamble in which there is a probability p of winning A and probability 1-p of winning nothing. The RC models marked with an asterisk are approximated by CBS in their analytically converted form of (see supplemental materials section A for the conversion proof and see Table 2 for the converted form).
Simulating utility functions for CBS recovery
| Simulating function | Equivalent expression in | Simulating parameters |
|---|---|---|
| Exponential | ||
| Hyperbola | ||
| General Hyp. | ||
| Logarithmic Time | ||
| Quasi-hyperbolic | ||
| Double Exp. | ||
| EUT | ||
| Hyperbola | ||
| GE weighting | ||
| TK weighting | ||
| Prelec weighting | ||
| General Hyp. |
Shown above are the ITC models and RC models used for assessing CBS’ function recovery expressed in form (see Supplemental Materials A for transformation proof). The parameter sets used to simulate choice datasets are shown on the right column.
Fig. 2Delay-specific discount rates and probability-specific degrees of risk aversion for different parametric models. a is the delay-specific discount rate of ITC models in Table 1. All parametric models of ITC in consideration show either constant (exponential) or decreasing delay-specific discount rates. b is the probability-specific degree of risk aversion, which is the log of the ratio between objective and subjective probabilities. A measure above 0 would indicate over-appreciation of probabilities and hence risk-seeking, while a measure below 0 would indicate risk-aversion. All parametric models of RC in consideration assume a behavioral pattern that switches between risk-aversion and risk-seeking at most once. In other words, the probability-specific degree of risk aversion for all RC parametric models can cross 0 (risk-neutral point) at most once
Fig. 3Example 1-piece and 2-piece CBS (a and b, respectively), and model specification of ITC (c) and RC (d) using 1-piece (left) and 2-piece CBS (right). Example 1-piece CBS is shown in (a), and 2-piece CBS is shown in (b). While each piece requires 4 points, because adjoining points overlap, 2-piece CBS requires 7 points. c Shows how CBS is used to flexibly model the delay discounting function and d shows how CBS is used to flexibly model the probability weighting function. In both ITC and RC, the coordinates of the points are free parameters that are estimated. The parameter constraints are shown on the right of each panel in dotted boxes. In the case of 2-piece CBS, there is one less degree of freedom than number of parameters due to the necessity of (, (, and ( being on the same line
Fig. 4Choice dataset simulations and recovery results. a, b Shows the average MAE of parametric and CBS functions under different simulating utility functions for ITC and RC, respectively. The large graphs on the left side show the average MAEs across all six simulating functions, while the small graphs on the right side show them for each of the six simulating functions separately. The dotted line shows the MAE of parametric models, while the solid line shows the MAE of CBS models. The dark dotted line shows the MAE of correctly specified parametric models, which serves as the theoretical lower bound of MAE at different dataset sizes
Fig. 5In-sample and out-of-sample prediction performance in ITC (a, left), and RC (b, right). In ITC, 6 parametric models and 2 CBS models are assessed; in RC, 10 parametric models and 2 CBS models are assessed. In both in-sample and out-of-sample, each model’s accuracy (top row) and Tjur’s D (bottom row) are assessed. The error bars represent the standard error of the mean
Fig. 6Plots of eight example participants’ choices in ITC, their best parametric fits and their best CBS fits as determined by LOOCV. a Shows 4 participants whose highest LOOCV Tjur’s D came from parametric models and b shows 4 participants whose highest LOOCV Tjur’s D came from CBS. In each panel, the top row shows the best parametric model (by LOOCV) and the bottom row shows the CBS fit. a participants are selected such that the diverse parametric forms can be shown; b participants are selected to show a variety of CBS fits that did not conform to parametric forms
Fig. 7Plots of eight example participants’ choices in RC, their best parametric fits and their best CBS fits as determined by LOOCV. a Shows 4 participants whose highest LOOCV Tjur’s D came from parametric models and b shows 4 participants whose highest LOOCV Tjur’s D came from CBS. In each panel, the top row shows the best parametric model (by LOOCV) and the bottom row shows the CBS fit. a Participants are selected such that the diverse parametric forms can be shown; b Participants are selected to show a variety of CBS fits that did not conform to parametric forms
Fig. 8Deviation from common parametric forms. a Shows CBS prediction performance minus the maximum of parametric models’ prediction performance in ITC. CBS shows increasingly better predictions as the average daily change in discount rate becomes positive. b Shows the average fitted CBS functions for ITC grouped by the average daily change in discount rate. The solid line is the median function, with gray shade showing the standard errors. c Shows that, in RC, CBS provides better predictions in participants who do not alternate between risk aversion and risk seeking or alternate more than one time. Panel D shows the average fitted CBS functions for RC grouped by the number of switches between risk-aversion and risk-seeking behavior. *t test against 0, . **, ***
Fig. 9Cross-session correlations and standard errors of overall measures of delay discounting (a, c) and risk aversion (b, d) as estimated by the Area Under the Curve (AUC) of CBS. In a, b, the abscissa marks the AUC measure of each participant in session 1 and the ordinate marks the AUC measure of each participant in session 2. The cross-session Pearson correlation measure of AUC was 0.79 for ITC and 0.60 for RC, both with p-values less than .001. c, d shows the standard errors of the AUC estimates obtained through a jackknife procedure