Premium
A Behavioral Remedy for the Censorship Bias
Author(s) -
Tong Jordan,
Feiler Daniel,
Larrick Richard
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
production and operations management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.279
H-Index - 110
eISSN - 1937-5956
pISSN - 1059-1478
DOI - 10.1111/poms.12823
Subject(s) - unobservable , stockout , sample (material) , unavailability , debiasing , order (exchange) , economics , on demand , demand characteristics , econometrics , actuarial science , marketing , microeconomics , computer science , psychology , business , operations management , statistics , social psychology , commerce , mathematics , chemistry , finance , chromatography
Existing evidence suggests that managers exhibit a censorship bias: demand beliefs tend to be biased low when lost sales from stockouts are unobservable (censored demand) compared to when they are observable (uncensored demand). We develop a non‐constraining, easily implementable behavioral debias technique to help mitigate this tendency in demand forecasting and inventory decision‐making settings. The debiasing technique has individuals record estimates of demand outcomes ( REDO ): participants explicitly record a self‐generated estimate of every demand realization, allowing them to record a different value than the number of sales in periods with stockouts. In doing so, they construct a more representative sample of demand realizations (that differs from the sales sample). In three laboratory experiments with MBA and undergraduate students, this remedy significantly reduces downward bias in demand beliefs under censorship and leads to higher inventory order decisions.