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What is DR@W Forum?

DR@W Forum is an interdisciplinary discussion series which focuses on theoretical and empirical research about decision making.

The usual structure of the forum is a 30 - 45 minute introduction of the topic/working paper, with ample additional time for discussion.

The audience prefers discussing work-in-progress topics as opposed to finished papers. We meet on Thursdays between 2:30 and 3:45pm during term time. Contact John Taylor (John.Taylor[at]wbs.ac.uk) if you would like to suggest a speaker for a future event. Notifications of upcoming DR@W Forum events along with other decision research related activities can be obtained by registering with the moderated mailing list - email behaviour_spotlight at newlistserv dot warwick dot ac dot uk to be added to the list.

If you attend DR@W, please take some time to fill in our survey It helps us understand who our audience are and how we can widen participation.

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DR@W Forum - Eugenio Proto (Glasgow)

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Location: WBS 1.007

Using novel data from Luxembourg and comparative evidence from the UK and Australia, we doc­ument systematic under-reporting of children's socio-emotional difficulties by parents - particularly for daughters. A distinctive feature of our study is the joint measurement of first-order beliefs (how parents think their child feels) and second-order beliefs (how parents think their child reports feeling), allowing us to disentangle information frictions from evaluative bias. We find that second-order beliefs are sys­tematically biased and that their precision is negatively correlated with the level of distress reported by the child. Parents with more accurate second-order beliefs also provide closer and unbiased first-order asvmaiments, suggesting that the negative difference between parent and child reports may arise from in­formation frictions rather than deliberate minimization. Misperceptions are more common among highly educated and employed parents, and in parent-child pairs with divergent personality traits. Interest­ingly, parents with more accurate priors about general parental under-reporting tend to show greater divergence from their child's report in their rust-order beliefs. An information treatment improves be­liefs among parents who already hold priors about systematic discrepancies between parent and child reports, demonstrating the malleability of parental beliefs to light-touch interventions. We also provide exploratory evidence that receiving accurate information can influence parents intentions to invest in their children's human capital.

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