A model of group decision-making is studied, in which one of two alternatives must be chosen. While group members differ in their valuations of the alternatives, everybody prefers agreement to disagreement. Our model is distinguished by three features: private information regarding valuations, varying intensities in the preference for one outcome over the other, and the option to declare neutrality in order to avoid disagreement. We uncover a variant on the “tyranny of the majority”: there is always an equilibrium in which the majority is more aggressive in pushing its alternative, thus enforcing their will via both numbers and voice. However, under general conditions an aggressive minority equilibrium inevitably makes an appearance, provid...
We study a model of a population making a binary decision based on information spreading within the ...
Negotiations often occur not between individuals but among groups (companies, trade unions, politica...
This paper experimentally investigates how individual preferences, through unrestricted deliberation...
Opinion compromise models can give insight into how groups of individuals may either come to form co...
In organizational groups, often a majority has aligned preferences that oppose those of a minority. ...
This paper studies how groups resolve disagreement in lottery choices. In an experiment, subjects su...
In organizational groups, often a majority has aligned preferences that oppose those of a minority. ...
Negotiations often occur not between individuals but among groups (companies, trade unions, politica...
This paper studies how groups resolve disagreement in lottery choices. In an experiment, subjects su...
This paper investigates the rationality of group decisions versus individual decisions under risk. W...
Recently many studies have been published that describe and explain how groups of social animals m...
We study a legislative bargaining game in which failure to agree in a given round may result in a br...
While modeling group decision making scenarios, the existence of a central authority is often assume...
This paper studies how groups resolve disagreement when they must reach unanimity after submitting i...
We investigate a setting in which members of a population, bifurcated into a majority and a minority...
We study a model of a population making a binary decision based on information spreading within the ...
Negotiations often occur not between individuals but among groups (companies, trade unions, politica...
This paper experimentally investigates how individual preferences, through unrestricted deliberation...
Opinion compromise models can give insight into how groups of individuals may either come to form co...
In organizational groups, often a majority has aligned preferences that oppose those of a minority. ...
This paper studies how groups resolve disagreement in lottery choices. In an experiment, subjects su...
In organizational groups, often a majority has aligned preferences that oppose those of a minority. ...
Negotiations often occur not between individuals but among groups (companies, trade unions, politica...
This paper studies how groups resolve disagreement in lottery choices. In an experiment, subjects su...
This paper investigates the rationality of group decisions versus individual decisions under risk. W...
Recently many studies have been published that describe and explain how groups of social animals m...
We study a legislative bargaining game in which failure to agree in a given round may result in a br...
While modeling group decision making scenarios, the existence of a central authority is often assume...
This paper studies how groups resolve disagreement when they must reach unanimity after submitting i...
We investigate a setting in which members of a population, bifurcated into a majority and a minority...
We study a model of a population making a binary decision based on information spreading within the ...
Negotiations often occur not between individuals but among groups (companies, trade unions, politica...
This paper experimentally investigates how individual preferences, through unrestricted deliberation...