This paper develops a binary-gamble framework for characterizing risk sensitivity and loss aversion in Cumulative Prospect Theory (CPT). The proposed probabilistic risk-sensitivity metric is defined as a probability-threshold ratio that determines acceptance and preference thresholds in choice problems involving either a certain outcome and a binary gamble or two binary gambles. We show how standard notions of symmetric and non-symmetric bet aversion can be recovered within this framework, and we compare the resulting threshold-based conditions with utility premia, probability premia, and ArrowPratt curvature measures. The analysis clarifies when these criteria coincide and when they diverge, particularly for increasing aversion conditions, binary gambles with unequal probability distributions, and settings involving probability weighting functions. We also identify technical restrictions that arise when CPT-utility functions are used to represent loss aversion at the reference point. The resulting framework provides a decision-theoretic interpretation of risk sensitivity that is directly tied to probability thresholds and complements existing premium-based approaches
Probabilistic risk sensitivity and loss aversion in cumulative prospect theory
Submitted to ArXiV, 4 June 2026
Type:
Rapport
Date:
2026-06-04
Department:
Systèmes de Communication
Eurecom Ref:
8815
Copyright:
© EURECOM. Personal use of this material is permitted. The definitive version of this paper was published in Submitted to ArXiV, 4 June 2026 and is available at :
See also:
PERMALINK : https://www.eurecom.fr/publication/8815