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Experience Effects in Finance: Foundations, Applications, and Future Directions
Author(s) -
Ulrike Malmendier
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
review of finance
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.933
H-Index - 61
eISSN - 1875-824X
pISSN - 1572-3097
DOI - 10.1093/rof/rfab020
Subject(s) - sketch , stock market , economics , stock (firearms) , key (lock) , empirical evidence , financial economics , cognitive science , psychology , epistemology , computer science , philosophy , mechanical engineering , paleontology , computer security , algorithm , horse , engineering , biology
This article establishes four key findings of the growing literature on experience effects in finance: (i) the long-lasting imprint of past experiences on beliefs and risk taking; (ii) recency effects; (iii) the domain-specificity of experience effects; and (iv) imperviousness to information that is not experience-based. I first discuss the neuroscientific foundations of experience-based learning and sketch a simple model of its role in the stock market based on Malmendier et al. (2020a, b). I then distill the empirical findings on experience effects in stock-market investment, trade dynamics, and international capital flows, highlighting these four key features. Finally, I contrast models of belief formation that rely on “learned information” with models accounting for the neuroscience evidence on synaptic tagging and memory formation, and provide directions for future research.

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