Jump to content

Winner's curse: Revision history


For any version listed below, click on its date to view it. For more help, see Help:Page history and Help:Edit summary. (cur) = difference from current version, (prev) = difference from preceding version, m = minor edit, → = section edit, ← = automatic edit summary

(newest | oldest) View (newer 50 | ) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)

11 April 2024

15 January 2024

11 December 2023

27 November 2023

17 October 2023

13 August 2023

27 February 2023

5 December 2022

16 June 2022

  • curprev 07:5307:53, 16 June 2022Citation bot talk contribs 10,575 bytes −83 Alter: title. Add: authors 1-1. Removed proxy/dead URL that duplicated identifier. Removed parameters. Some additions/deletions were parameter name changes. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | Suggested by Headbomb | Linked from Wikipedia:WikiProject_Academic_Journals/Journals_cited_by_Wikipedia/Sandbox | #UCB_webform_linked 337/414 undo

27 May 2022

15 April 2022

  • curprev 18:2418:24, 15 April 2022Belbury talk contribs 10,658 bytes +59 Adding local short description: "Tendency to overestimate in auctions", overriding Wikidata description "phenomenon in common value auctions—where all bidders have the same value for an item but get different private signals about it—where the bidder with the most optimistic evaluation of the asset wins, thus tending to overestimate/overpay" (Shortdesc helper) undo

29 December 2021

19 November 2021

2 November 2021

7 October 2021

5 October 2021

6 May 2021

8 March 2021

19 February 2021

  • curprev 12:0812:08, 19 February 2021AnomieBOT talk contribsm 10,155 bytes +19 Dating maintenance tags: {{CN}} undo
  • curprev 09:5609:56, 19 February 202167.163.88.79 talk 10,136 bytes +7 →‎Explanation: It is not clear why winner's curse "does not arise" here. As a trivial example, if multiple parties desire a thing independently of its market value, but *just happen to have the same private value*, then the situation should be indistinguishable from the public value situation. In any case, "does not" implies a "never" sort of thing, and is very steong language that seems to deserve a citation. undo Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit

4 February 2021

28 January 2021

1 September 2020

28 August 2020

26 March 2020

8 February 2020

12 December 2019

23 September 2019

15 August 2019

8 August 2019

6 August 2019

9 June 2019

3 February 2019

27 January 2019

14 January 2019

6 November 2018

27 October 2018

22 October 2018

14 October 2018

(newest | oldest) View (newer 50 | ) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)