We consider the properties of perfectly discriminating contests in which players’ abilities are stochastic, but become common knowledge before efforts are expended. Players whose expected ability is lower than that of their rivals may still earn a positive expected payoff from participating in the contest, which may explain why they participate. We also show that an increase in the dispersion of a player’s own ability generally benefits this player. It may benefit or harm his rival but cannot benefit the rival more than it benefits himself. We also explore the role of stochastic ability for sequential contests with the same opponent (multibattle contests) and with varying opponents (elimination tournaments) and show that it reduces the stro...
We study Tullock’s (1980) n-player contest when each player has an independent prob-ability 0 < p...
This article proposes a stochastic foundation for the contest success function (CSF for short) with ...
We study tournaments with many ex-ante asymmetric contestants, whose valuations for the prize are in...
"We consider the properties of perfectly discriminating contests in which players' abilities are sto...
We study contests where, subject only to a capacity constraint on mean performance, contestants comp...
This paper studies sabotage in tournaments with at least three contestants, where the contestants kn...
We study Tullock's (1980) n-player contest when each player has an independent probability 0 < p 2 i...
This paper models success probability in imperfectly discriminating contests involving multiple play...
A problem of Parallel Contests is raised and modeled. The equilibria in final situations of parallel...
In this paper we study a two stage contest where the strength of players in the second stage depends...
Tournaments of heterogeneous candidates can be thought of as probabilistic mechanisms that select hi...
This paper models success probability in imperfectly discriminating contests involving multiple play...
In this paper we study a two stage contest where the strength of players in the second stage depends...
In this paper we study a two stage contest where the strength of players in the second stage depends...
We study tournaments with many ex-ante asymmetric contestants, whose valuations for the prize are in...
We study Tullock’s (1980) n-player contest when each player has an independent prob-ability 0 < p...
This article proposes a stochastic foundation for the contest success function (CSF for short) with ...
We study tournaments with many ex-ante asymmetric contestants, whose valuations for the prize are in...
"We consider the properties of perfectly discriminating contests in which players' abilities are sto...
We study contests where, subject only to a capacity constraint on mean performance, contestants comp...
This paper studies sabotage in tournaments with at least three contestants, where the contestants kn...
We study Tullock's (1980) n-player contest when each player has an independent probability 0 < p 2 i...
This paper models success probability in imperfectly discriminating contests involving multiple play...
A problem of Parallel Contests is raised and modeled. The equilibria in final situations of parallel...
In this paper we study a two stage contest where the strength of players in the second stage depends...
Tournaments of heterogeneous candidates can be thought of as probabilistic mechanisms that select hi...
This paper models success probability in imperfectly discriminating contests involving multiple play...
In this paper we study a two stage contest where the strength of players in the second stage depends...
In this paper we study a two stage contest where the strength of players in the second stage depends...
We study tournaments with many ex-ante asymmetric contestants, whose valuations for the prize are in...
We study Tullock’s (1980) n-player contest when each player has an independent prob-ability 0 < p...
This article proposes a stochastic foundation for the contest success function (CSF for short) with ...
We study tournaments with many ex-ante asymmetric contestants, whose valuations for the prize are in...