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Extended probabilities and their application to statistical inference

We propose a new, more general definition of extended probability measures. We study their properties and provide a behavioral interpretation. We put them to use in an inference procedure, whose environment is canonically represented by the probability space $(Ω,\mathcal{F},P)$, when both $P$ and the composition of $Ω$ are unknown. We develop an ex ante analysis -- taking place before the statistical analysis requiring knowledge of $Ω$ -- in which the true composition of $Ω$ is progressively learned. We describe how to update extended probabilities in this setting, and introduce the concept of lower extended probabilities. We apply our findings to a species sampling problem and to the study of the boomerang effect (the empirical observation that sometimes persuasion yields the opposite effect: the persuaded agent moves their opinion away from the opinion of the persuading agent).

preprint2023arXivOpen access
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