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What makes a rule complex?

By: Oprea, Ryan.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: The American Economic Review Description: 110(12), Dec, 2020: p.3913-3951.Subject(s): Empirical analysis In: The American Economic ReviewSummary: We study the complexity of rules by paying experimental subjects to implement a series of algorithms and then eliciting their willingness-to-pay to avoid implementing them again in the future. The design allows us to examine hypotheses from the theoretical "automata" literature about the characteristics of rules that generate complexity costs. We find substantial aversion to complexity and a number of regularities in the characteristics of rules that make them complex and costly for subjects. Experience with a rule, the way a rule is represented, and the context in which a rule is implemented (mentally versus physically) also influence complexity. – Reproduced
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
110(12), Dec, 2020: p.3913-3951 Available AR124907

We study the complexity of rules by paying experimental subjects to implement a series of algorithms and then eliciting their willingness-to-pay to avoid implementing them again in the future. The design allows us to examine hypotheses from the theoretical "automata" literature about the characteristics of rules that generate complexity costs. We find substantial aversion to complexity and a number of regularities in the characteristics of rules that make them complex and costly for subjects. Experience with a rule, the way a rule is represented, and the context in which a rule is implemented (mentally versus physically) also influence complexity. – Reproduced

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