Seminar Designing Deceptive Features for Lottery Sales: Experimental Evidence
12 May 2026
Research Seminar
- 12:00 PM - 01:30 PM
- Online on Microsoft Teams and in person : Auditorium, piazza Scaravilli 2, Bologna
- Science & Technology, Society & Culture In English
How to partecipate
Free admission subject to availability
Program
Abstract
Consumers often face products sold as lotteries rather than fixed outcomes. A prominent case is the loot box in video games, where players pay for randomized rewards. We investigate how presentation formats affect consumer beliefs and willingness to pay. In an online experiment with 802 participants, sellers could frame lotteries using two common manipulations: censoring outcome probabilities and selectively highlighting rare successes. More than 80% of sellers adopted such deceptive frames, particularly when both manipulations were available. These choices substantially inflated buyer beliefs and increased willingness to pay of up to six times the expected value. Sellers anticipated this effect and raised prices accordingly. Our results show how deceptive framing systematically shifts consumer beliefs and enables firms to extract additional surplus. For marketing practice, this highlights the strategic value of framing tools in probabilistic selling models; for policy, it underscores the importance of transparency requirements in protecting consumers.
Speakers
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Hans-Theo Normann
Professor of Game Theory and Experimental Economics
Düsseldorf Institute for Competition Economics (DICE)