Abstract: We investigate experimentally how the share of experienced traders in double-auction asset markets affects trading, in particular the occurrence of bubble-crash pricing patterns. In each session, six subjects trade in three successive market rounds and gain experience. In a fourth round, depending on the treatment, two or four experienced subjects are replaced by inexperienced subjects. The results are compared to earlier findings when all traders were either inexperienced or experienced. We explore what can be learned by analogy between these laboratory findings and the performance of naturally occurring markets
We conducted asset market experiments where one experienced subject (EH) interacts with five inexper...
We report a laboratory experiment that investigates the impact of observational learning and visual ...
The flash crash experienced by U.S. markets in May 2010 provided stark evidence that a large trade c...
Abstract: We investigate experimentally how the share of experienced traders in double-auction asset...
We revisit the effect of traders' experience on price bubbles by introducing either one-third or two...
We study the role of experience in the formation of asset price bubbles. Therefore, we conduct two r...
Empirical evidence suggests that prices do not always reflect fundamental values and individual beha...
We report the results of an experiment designed to study the role of institutional structure in the ...
Price ‘bubbles’, which refer to sustained overvaluation in an asset, represent a serious threat to t...
ACL-1International audienceWe conducted asset market experiments where one experienced subject inter...
We report 28 new experiment sessions consisting of up to three experience levels to examine the robu...
We demonstrate when market experience is spaced out over a longer period of time (weeks instead of ...
Does traders' experience reduce their propensity to participate in speculate bubbles? This paper stu...
This paper is a revision of “An Experimental Study of Bubble Formation in Asset Markets Using the Tâ...
We evaluate how traders' asset market activities are distributed in time impacts pricing efficiency,...
We conducted asset market experiments where one experienced subject (EH) interacts with five inexper...
We report a laboratory experiment that investigates the impact of observational learning and visual ...
The flash crash experienced by U.S. markets in May 2010 provided stark evidence that a large trade c...
Abstract: We investigate experimentally how the share of experienced traders in double-auction asset...
We revisit the effect of traders' experience on price bubbles by introducing either one-third or two...
We study the role of experience in the formation of asset price bubbles. Therefore, we conduct two r...
Empirical evidence suggests that prices do not always reflect fundamental values and individual beha...
We report the results of an experiment designed to study the role of institutional structure in the ...
Price ‘bubbles’, which refer to sustained overvaluation in an asset, represent a serious threat to t...
ACL-1International audienceWe conducted asset market experiments where one experienced subject inter...
We report 28 new experiment sessions consisting of up to three experience levels to examine the robu...
We demonstrate when market experience is spaced out over a longer period of time (weeks instead of ...
Does traders' experience reduce their propensity to participate in speculate bubbles? This paper stu...
This paper is a revision of “An Experimental Study of Bubble Formation in Asset Markets Using the Tâ...
We evaluate how traders' asset market activities are distributed in time impacts pricing efficiency,...
We conducted asset market experiments where one experienced subject (EH) interacts with five inexper...
We report a laboratory experiment that investigates the impact of observational learning and visual ...
The flash crash experienced by U.S. markets in May 2010 provided stark evidence that a large trade c...