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Behavioral Finance

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Behavioral Finance

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Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
4.4

4,557 reviews

Beginner level
No prior experience required
Flexible schedule
5 hours to complete
Learn at your own pace
96%
Most learners liked this course

Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
4.4

4,557 reviews

Beginner level
No prior experience required
Flexible schedule
5 hours to complete
Learn at your own pace
96%
Most learners liked this course

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Assessments

3 assignments

Taught in English

There are 3 modules in this course

We make thousands of decisions every day. Do I cross the road now, or wait for the oncoming truck to pass? Should I eat fries or a salad for lunch? How much should I tip the cab driver? We usually make these decisions with almost no thought, using what psychologists call “heuristics” – rules of thumb that enable us to navigate our lives. Without these mental shortcuts, we would be paralyzed by the multitude of daily choices. But in certain circumstances, these shortcuts lead to predictable errors – predictable, that is, if we know what to watch out for. Did you know, for example, that we are naturally biased towards selling investments that are doing well for us, but holding on to those that are doing poorly? Or that we often select sub-optimal insurance payment plans, and routinely purchase insurance that we don’t even need? And why do so many of us fail to enroll in our employer’s corporate retirement plans, even when the employer offers to match our contributions?

Behavioral finance is the study of these and dozens of other financial decision-making errors that can be avoided, if we are familiar with the biases that cause them. In this course, we examine these predictable errors, and discover where we are most susceptible to them. This course is intended to guide participants towards better financial choices. Learn how to improve your spending, saving, and investing decisions for the future.

Welcome to the course! In this first week, we'll look at the classical economic model of consumer choice, which assumes that all of the decisions that we make are sensible, or “rational.” Once we have examined the underlying theory of how people should behave (especially around financial decisions), we will move on to examine how people do behave. We will focus in particular on situations in which we are most inclined to make decisions that appear to defy rational choice axioms.

What's included

5 videos5 readings1 assignment

5 videosTotal 23 minutes
  • Welcome to Behavioral Finance3 minutes
  • Introduction to Classical Economics1 minute
  • Utility of Money6 minutes
  • Omission Bias Case Study2 minutes
  • Expected Utility vs Prospect Theory10 minutes
5 readingsTotal 45 minutes
  • Course Overview10 minutes
  • Report a problem with the course5 minutes
  • Utility of Money10 minutes
  • Omission Bias10 minutes
  • Answer Choice Explanations and Correct Answers for Week 1 Quiz10 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 30 minutes
  • Week 1 Quiz30 minutes

Welcome to the second week. In this session, we will discover how our minds are inclined to distort probabilities, and either underestimate or overestimate the likelihood of certain outcomes. We’ll also learn about “heuristic-driven bias”: the tendency to use rules of thumb that simplify the process of making decisions, but can also lead to predictable errors. These biases negatively affect our decision-making far more than we might expect; especially when the outcome of the decision has great significance for us.

What's included

8 videos6 readings1 assignment

8 videosTotal 63 minutes
  • Correlation and Causation Error17 minutes
  • Probability Weighting4 minutes
  • Relative Probabilities2 minutes
  • The Availability Heuristic10 minutes
  • Mental Accounting and Expenditures7 minutes
  • Loss Aversion9 minutes
  • Belief Perseverance and Confirmation Bias9 minutes
  • Case Study: Belief Perseverance4 minutes
6 readingsTotal 60 minutes
  • Problems with Probability10 minutes
  • Probability Weighting10 minutes
  • The Availability Heuristic10 minutes
  • Framing10 minutes
  • Representativeness10 minutes
  • Overconfidence10 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 30 minutes
  • Week 2 Quiz30 minutes

In the final week of the course, we will see multiple examples of how mental heuristics can lead us to make predictably sub-optimal financial decisions, both individually and across the entire financial markets. We will also discuss the many ways in which you can now improve your financial decision-making because of your deeper understanding of the innate biases that have tripped you up in the past!

What's included

2 videos3 readings1 assignment

2 videosTotal 8 minutes
  • Introduction to Financial Decision Making1 minute
  • Benefits of Saving Early7 minutes
3 readingsTotal 30 minutes
  • Money Management10 minutes
  • Market Bubbles & Crashes10 minutes
  • Share your learning experience10 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 30 minutes
  • Week 3 Quiz30 minutes

Instructors

Instructor ratings
4.5 (1,059 ratings)
Duke University
1 Course203,169 learners

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Showing 3 of 4557

SS
·

Reviewed on Apr 1, 2021

The concepts are explained in detail but sometimes too much in detail without parallel examples to real life that sometimes, all biases seem to be the same. More videos needed.

LC
·

Reviewed on Oct 28, 2022

T​his was a great course and I love digging deeper into the behaviors that drive finance. I did feel though, that there was somewhat of a disconnect from the material to the quizes.

SK
·

Reviewed on Feb 25, 2020

Good course! There is just one thing I would improve here - an explanation of the mistakes after the tests are done. This improvement should increase the student`s understanding of specific topics.

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