This study reports an experiment that examines whether groups can better comply with theoretical predictions than individuals in contests. Our experiment replicates previous findings that individual players significantly overbid relative to theoretical predictions, incurring substantial losses. There is high variance in individual bids and strong heterogeneity across individual players. The new findings of our experiment are that groups make 25 % lower bids, their bids have lower variance, and group bids are less heterogeneous than individual bids. Therefore, groups receive significantly higher and more homogeneous payoffs than individuals. We elicit individual and group preferences towards risk using simple lotteries. The results indicate ...
Bidding behavior in all-pay auctions is well documented as deviating from the Nash predictions. In p...
The paper reports on a series of asymmetric auction experiments with private-independent values and ...
It is still an open question when groups perform better than individuals in intellectual tasks. We r...
This study reports an experiment that examines whether groups can better comply with theoretical pre...
This paper reports an experiment that examines whether groups can make better decisions than individ...
This study reports an experiment that examines whether groups can better comply with theoretical pre...
In an experiment, we studied how small groups tackle a company takeover game, a task where participa...
We investigate the effects of group size and matching protocol in Tullock contest experiments. In a ...
AbstractCompetitive interactions between individuals are ubiquitous in human societies. Auctions rep...
The aim of this paper is to analyze bidders’ behavior, comparing individuals and groups’ decisions w...
We provide an overview of experimental literature on contests and point out the two main phenomena o...
Group contests are ubiquitous. Some examples include warfare between countries, competition between ...
Auction games have been relatively neglected by empirical researchers in spite of their apparent rel...
We investigate, theoretically and experimentally, the effect of competition on risk taking in a cont...
We investigate, theoretically and experimentally, the effect of competition on risk taking in a cont...
Bidding behavior in all-pay auctions is well documented as deviating from the Nash predictions. In p...
The paper reports on a series of asymmetric auction experiments with private-independent values and ...
It is still an open question when groups perform better than individuals in intellectual tasks. We r...
This study reports an experiment that examines whether groups can better comply with theoretical pre...
This paper reports an experiment that examines whether groups can make better decisions than individ...
This study reports an experiment that examines whether groups can better comply with theoretical pre...
In an experiment, we studied how small groups tackle a company takeover game, a task where participa...
We investigate the effects of group size and matching protocol in Tullock contest experiments. In a ...
AbstractCompetitive interactions between individuals are ubiquitous in human societies. Auctions rep...
The aim of this paper is to analyze bidders’ behavior, comparing individuals and groups’ decisions w...
We provide an overview of experimental literature on contests and point out the two main phenomena o...
Group contests are ubiquitous. Some examples include warfare between countries, competition between ...
Auction games have been relatively neglected by empirical researchers in spite of their apparent rel...
We investigate, theoretically and experimentally, the effect of competition on risk taking in a cont...
We investigate, theoretically and experimentally, the effect of competition on risk taking in a cont...
Bidding behavior in all-pay auctions is well documented as deviating from the Nash predictions. In p...
The paper reports on a series of asymmetric auction experiments with private-independent values and ...
It is still an open question when groups perform better than individuals in intellectual tasks. We r...