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  2. Choice modelling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choice_modelling

    Louviere (marketing and transport) and colleagues in environmental and health economics came to disavow the American terminology, claiming that it was misleading and disguised a fundamental difference discrete choice experiments have from traditional conjoint methods: discrete choice experiments have a testable theory of human decision-making ...

  3. Utility maximization problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utility_maximization_problem

    In practice, a consumer may not always pick an optimal bundle. For example, it may require too much thought or too much time. Bounded rationality is a theory that explains this behaviour. Examples of alternatives to utility maximisation due to bounded rationality are; satisficing, elimination by aspects and the mental accounting heuristic.

  4. Marginal utility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marginal_utility

    In the context of cardinal utility, liberal economists postulate a law of diminishing marginal utility. This law states that the first unit of consumption of a good or service yields more satisfaction or utility than the subsequent units, and there is a continuing reduction in satisfaction or utility for greater amounts.

  5. Cardinal utility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardinal_utility

    A utility function is considered to be measurable, if the strength of preference or intensity of liking of a good or service is determined with precision by the use of some objective criteria. For example, suppose that eating an apple gives to a person exactly half the pleasure of that of eating an orange.

  6. Ordinal utility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ordinal_utility

    Ordinal utility theory claims that it is only meaningful to ask which option is better than the other, but it is meaningless to ask how much better it is or how good it is. All of the theory of consumer decision-making under conditions of certainty can be, and typically is, expressed in terms of ordinal utility.

  7. Indifference curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indifference_curve

    Given a utility function u(x,y), to calculate the MRS, one takes the partial derivative of the function u with respect to good x and divide it by the partial derivative of the function u with respect to good y. If the marginal rate of substitution is diminishing along an indifference curve, that is the magnitude of the slope is decreasing or ...

  8. William Stanley Jevons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Stanley_Jevons

    Cardinal utility allows the relative magnitude of utilities to be discussed, while ordinal utility only implies that goods can be compared and ranked according to which good provided the most utility. Although Jevons predated the debate about ordinality or cardinality of utility, his mathematics required the use of cardinal utility functions.

  9. Linear utility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_utility

    Each demand curve (demand as a function of price) is a step function: the consumer wants to buy zero units of a good whose utility/price ratio is below the maximum, and wants to buy as many units as possible of a good whose utility/price ratio is maximum. The consumer regards the goods as perfect substitute goods.