In the context of a “beauty-contest ” coordination game (in which pay-offs depend on the quadratic distance of actions from an unobserved state variable and from the average action), players choose how much costly attention to pay to various informative signals. Each signal has an underlying accuracy (how precisely it identifies the state) and a clarity (how easy it is to understand). The unique linear equilibrium has interesting properties: the signals which receive attention are the clearest available, even if they have poor underlying accuracy; the number of signals observed falls as the complementarity of players ’ actions rises; and, if actions are more complementary, the information endogenously acquired in equilibrium is more public ...
overreaction to public information in beauty contest games, which leads to reconsidering the benefit...
This paper studies endogenous information manipulation in games where a population can overthrow a r...
This paper examines the welfare properties of “beauty contest” games with rationally inattentive age...
In the context of a “beauty contest” coordination game (in which payoffs depend on the quadratic dis...
Abstract. In the context of a “beauty contest ” coordination game (in which payoffs depend on the qu...
In the context of a “beauty-contest ” coordination game (in which pay-offs depend on the quadratic d...
We study information acquisition in a coordination game with incom-plete information. To capture the...
We study information acquisition in a coordination game with incomplete information. To capture the ...
We study a Bayesian coordination game where agents receive private information on the game’s payoff ...
We study flexible information acquisition in a coordination game. “Flexible” acquisition means that ...
We investigate the role of information and endogenous timing of decisions on co-ordination. In a glo...
In an asymmetric coordination (or anti-coordination) game, players acquire and use signals about a p...
We experimentally investigate the role of information transparency for equilibrium selection in stag...
International audienceWe experimentally study an asymmetric coordination game with two Nash equilibr...
International audienceThe authors study experimentally a coordination game with N heterogeneous indi...
overreaction to public information in beauty contest games, which leads to reconsidering the benefit...
This paper studies endogenous information manipulation in games where a population can overthrow a r...
This paper examines the welfare properties of “beauty contest” games with rationally inattentive age...
In the context of a “beauty contest” coordination game (in which payoffs depend on the quadratic dis...
Abstract. In the context of a “beauty contest ” coordination game (in which payoffs depend on the qu...
In the context of a “beauty-contest ” coordination game (in which pay-offs depend on the quadratic d...
We study information acquisition in a coordination game with incom-plete information. To capture the...
We study information acquisition in a coordination game with incomplete information. To capture the ...
We study a Bayesian coordination game where agents receive private information on the game’s payoff ...
We study flexible information acquisition in a coordination game. “Flexible” acquisition means that ...
We investigate the role of information and endogenous timing of decisions on co-ordination. In a glo...
In an asymmetric coordination (or anti-coordination) game, players acquire and use signals about a p...
We experimentally investigate the role of information transparency for equilibrium selection in stag...
International audienceWe experimentally study an asymmetric coordination game with two Nash equilibr...
International audienceThe authors study experimentally a coordination game with N heterogeneous indi...
overreaction to public information in beauty contest games, which leads to reconsidering the benefit...
This paper studies endogenous information manipulation in games where a population can overthrow a r...
This paper examines the welfare properties of “beauty contest” games with rationally inattentive age...