Sentiments are characteristics of players' beliefs. I propose two notions of sentiments, confidence and optimism, and I study their role in shaping the set of rationalizable strategy profiles in (incomplete information) games with complementarities. Confidence is related to a player's perceived precision of information; optimism is the sentiment that the outcome of the game will be ``favorable.'' I prove two main results on how sentiments and payoffs interact to determine the size and location of the set of rationalizable profiles. The first result provides an explicit upper bound on the size of the set of rationalizable strategy profiles, relating complementarities and confidence; the second gives an explicit lower bound on the change of l...
This paper considers the impact of ambiguity in strategic situations. It extends the earlier literat...
We propose an incomplete information analogue of rationalizability. An action is said to be belief-f...
Predictions under common knowledge of payoffs may differ from those under arbitrarily, but finitely,...
Abstract. Sentiments are characteristics of players ’ beliefs. I propose two notions of sentiments, ...
We propose two characteristics of players' beliefs and study their role in shaping the set of ration...
We study players interacting under the veil of ignorance, who have -- coarse -- beliefs represented ...
We consider a general class of games that have been used to model many economic problems where playe...
Strategy is formally defined as a complete plan of action for every contingency in a game. Ideal age...
We provide a discipline for beliefs formation through a model of subjective beliefs, in which agents...
We investigate how distorted, yet structured, beliefs can persist in strategic situations. Specifica...
Game theoretic modeling involves making assumptions on agents\u27 infinite hierarchies of beliefs. T...
We study the strategic impact of players’ higher-order uncertainty over the observability of actions...
We provide a discipline for beliefs formation through a model of subjective beliefs, in which agents...
We consider rationality and rationalizability for normal-form games of incomplete information in whi...
We investigate how distorted, yet structured, beliefs can persist in strategic situations. Specifica...
This paper considers the impact of ambiguity in strategic situations. It extends the earlier literat...
We propose an incomplete information analogue of rationalizability. An action is said to be belief-f...
Predictions under common knowledge of payoffs may differ from those under arbitrarily, but finitely,...
Abstract. Sentiments are characteristics of players ’ beliefs. I propose two notions of sentiments, ...
We propose two characteristics of players' beliefs and study their role in shaping the set of ration...
We study players interacting under the veil of ignorance, who have -- coarse -- beliefs represented ...
We consider a general class of games that have been used to model many economic problems where playe...
Strategy is formally defined as a complete plan of action for every contingency in a game. Ideal age...
We provide a discipline for beliefs formation through a model of subjective beliefs, in which agents...
We investigate how distorted, yet structured, beliefs can persist in strategic situations. Specifica...
Game theoretic modeling involves making assumptions on agents\u27 infinite hierarchies of beliefs. T...
We study the strategic impact of players’ higher-order uncertainty over the observability of actions...
We provide a discipline for beliefs formation through a model of subjective beliefs, in which agents...
We consider rationality and rationalizability for normal-form games of incomplete information in whi...
We investigate how distorted, yet structured, beliefs can persist in strategic situations. Specifica...
This paper considers the impact of ambiguity in strategic situations. It extends the earlier literat...
We propose an incomplete information analogue of rationalizability. An action is said to be belief-f...
Predictions under common knowledge of payoffs may differ from those under arbitrarily, but finitely,...