Table Selling and buying price for Duke lottery winners and sellers. Median ($) Selling price (of lottery winners) 1,500 Buying price (of lottery losers) 150 e can appear so different to buyers and sellers, Journal of Consumer Research, 27:3, 360-370. With permission from the University of Chicago Press. Source: Carmon and Ariely (2000), Focusing on the forgone: how value can
At Duke University, tickets for the men’s basketball team are highly coveted. The student fans known as the “Cameron Crazies” often camp outside the basketball arena for days leading up to the season’s start in hopes of earning the right to buy tickets. Almost every year, the Duke basketball teamis invited to play in the NCAA Basketball Tournament, the winner of which is crowned the champion of US college basketball. Tickets for this event are even harder to get. Students who want tickets sign up for a “lottery” and only some are randomly chosen to win the chance of purchasing tickets to the tournament. After the lottery one year, Carmon and Ariely (2000) asked those who won the right to buy a ticket the lowest possible
a. Given the results in Table, are any of the lottery winners likely to sell their tickets to lottery losers?
b. Suppose that the Duke students are answering honestly about their selling and buying prices. Should winning or losing the lottery have any effect on their answers? Whymight winning the lottery have such a dramatic effect on the value that students place on the game tickets?
c. Which aspect of prospect theory is most important in providing an explanation for these results?
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