We study how professional players and college students play zero-sum two-person strategic games in a laboratory setting. We first ask professionals to play a 2 × 2 game that is formally identical to a strategic interaction situation that they face in their natural environment. Consistent with their behaviour in the field, they play very close to the equilibrium of the game. In particular, (i) they equate their strategies’ payoffs to the equilibrium ones and (ii) they generate sequences of choices that are serially independent. In sharp contrast, however, we find that college students play the game far from the equilibrium predictions. We then study the behaviour of professional players and college students in the classic O’Neill 4 × 4 zero-...
This paper is about people's strategic behavior as observed through experiments. The research questi...
This paper reports the results of laboratory experiments in which subjects were presented with diffe...
We conduct experiments with adolescent participants on repeated fixed play in three different zero-s...
We study how professional players and college students play zero-sum two-person strategic games in a...
We study how professional players and college students play zero-sum two-person strategic games in a...
We study how professional players and college students play zero-sum two-person strategic games in a...
We study how professional players and college students play zero-sum two-person strategic games in a...
Does expertise in strategic behavior obtained in the field transfer to the abstract setting of the l...
The minimax argument represents game theory in its most elegant form: simple but with stark predicti...
The minimax argument represents game theory in its most elegant form: simple but with stark predicti...
The implications of the Minimax theorem are tested using natural data. The tests use a unique data s...
The authors examine learning in all experiments they could locate involving one hundred periods or m...
JEL No. D01,D82 Game theory makes strong predictions about how individuals should behave in two play...
We conduct experiments with adolescent participants on repeated fixed play in three different zero-s...
In this paper, the authors reexamine the data from B. O'Neill's (1987) experiment involving a repeat...
This paper is about people's strategic behavior as observed through experiments. The research questi...
This paper reports the results of laboratory experiments in which subjects were presented with diffe...
We conduct experiments with adolescent participants on repeated fixed play in three different zero-s...
We study how professional players and college students play zero-sum two-person strategic games in a...
We study how professional players and college students play zero-sum two-person strategic games in a...
We study how professional players and college students play zero-sum two-person strategic games in a...
We study how professional players and college students play zero-sum two-person strategic games in a...
Does expertise in strategic behavior obtained in the field transfer to the abstract setting of the l...
The minimax argument represents game theory in its most elegant form: simple but with stark predicti...
The minimax argument represents game theory in its most elegant form: simple but with stark predicti...
The implications of the Minimax theorem are tested using natural data. The tests use a unique data s...
The authors examine learning in all experiments they could locate involving one hundred periods or m...
JEL No. D01,D82 Game theory makes strong predictions about how individuals should behave in two play...
We conduct experiments with adolescent participants on repeated fixed play in three different zero-s...
In this paper, the authors reexamine the data from B. O'Neill's (1987) experiment involving a repeat...
This paper is about people's strategic behavior as observed through experiments. The research questi...
This paper reports the results of laboratory experiments in which subjects were presented with diffe...
We conduct experiments with adolescent participants on repeated fixed play in three different zero-s...