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The abnormal psychology of investment performance
In: Review of financial economics: RFE, Band 23, Heft 2, S. 55-63
ISSN: 1873-5924
AbstractWe examine a range of mental health characteristics (e.g. depression, paranoia, and schizophrenia) in subjects engaged in simulated investment trading, showing that certain abnormal personality characteristics have a statistically significant association with the degree of investment diversification, the return achieved, the degree of risk undertaken, and the resultant risk‐adjusted performance. These financially educated individuals are more paranoid and psychopathically deviant than the average person, with high scores on these characteristics associated with greater risk‐taking. Finally, male and female investors possess different mental health strengths and weaknesses in relation to their financial performance.
Manager See Manager Do: The Impact of Geographic Herding on Corporate Social Responsibility
In: Nofsinger, J., Patterson, F., & Shank, C. (2022). Manager See Manager Do: The Impact of Geographic Spillover on Corporate Social Responsibility. International Journal of Managerial Finance
SSRN
On the Physiology of Investment Biases: The Role of Cortisol and Testosterone
In: Nofsinger, J., Patterson, F., & Shank, C. (2020). On the Physiology of Investment Biases: The Role of Testosterone and Cortisol. Journal of Behavioral Finance. 22(3), 338-349.
SSRN
Working paper
Decision-Making, Financial Risk Aversion and Behavioral Biases: The Role of Testosterone and Stress
In: Nofsinger, J., Patterson, F., & Shank, C. (2018). Decision Making, Financial Risk Aversion, and Behavioral Biases: The Role of Testosterone and Stress. Journal of Economics and Human Biology, 29, 1-16.
SSRN
Behavioral Biases in the NFL Gambling Market: Overreaction to News and the Recency Bias
In: Durand, R., Patterson, F., & Shank, C. (2021). Behavioral Biases in the NFL Gambling Market: Overreaction to News and the Recency Bias. Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Finance. 31, 100522
SSRN
The Relationship between Psychopathy and Financial Risk and Time Preferences
In: Shank, C., Dupoyet, B., Durand, R., & Patterson, P. (2020). The Relationship between Psychopathy and Financial Risk and Time Preferences. Studies in Economics and Finance. 38(1), 32-49.
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Working paper