This paper investigates the conventional wisdom that markets would naturally allocate the rights for performing decisional task to those players who might be best suited to perform the task. We embedded the decisional tasks in a stylised setting of a game, motivated by Littlewood(1953) Red Hat Puzzle, when the optimal choices in the game require players to employ logical and epistemological reasoning. We present a treatment where players are permitted to trade their participation rights to the game. The payoffs are furthermore calibrated such that the players who know the optimal choice in the game should value the rights strictly more than those who do not. However, aggregated performances in this treatment were found to be significantly ...
Recent work on the evolution of social contracts and conventions has often used models of bargaining...
We report results from two different settings of a 3-player ultimatum game. Under the monocratic rul...
This paper studies the extent to which offers and demands in ultimatum games are consistent with equ...
This paper investigates the conventional wisdom that markets should allocate the rights for performi...
This paper investigates the conventional wisdom that market competition for the rights to perform de...
We auction scarce rights to play the Proposer and Responder positions in ultimatum games. As a contr...
Maintaining a subject's freedom to decide imposes structure and constraints on learning systems that...
We present a simple mechanism that can be implemented in a simple experiment. In a modified trust ga...
Choice between different versions of a game may provide a means of sorting, allowing players with di...
We auction scarce rights to play the Proposer and Responder positions in ultimatum games. As a contr...
A model is proposed to explain the results of recent experiments in which subjects repeatedly played...
In this paper we report some experimental results on the effects that auctioning the right to play a...
Whereas orthodox game theory relies on the unrealistic assumption of (commonly known) perfect ration...
A model is proposed to explain the results of recent experiments in which subjects repeatedly played...
In economics, players are assumed to be rational: they exhibit self interested behavior and play equ...
Recent work on the evolution of social contracts and conventions has often used models of bargaining...
We report results from two different settings of a 3-player ultimatum game. Under the monocratic rul...
This paper studies the extent to which offers and demands in ultimatum games are consistent with equ...
This paper investigates the conventional wisdom that markets should allocate the rights for performi...
This paper investigates the conventional wisdom that market competition for the rights to perform de...
We auction scarce rights to play the Proposer and Responder positions in ultimatum games. As a contr...
Maintaining a subject's freedom to decide imposes structure and constraints on learning systems that...
We present a simple mechanism that can be implemented in a simple experiment. In a modified trust ga...
Choice between different versions of a game may provide a means of sorting, allowing players with di...
We auction scarce rights to play the Proposer and Responder positions in ultimatum games. As a contr...
A model is proposed to explain the results of recent experiments in which subjects repeatedly played...
In this paper we report some experimental results on the effects that auctioning the right to play a...
Whereas orthodox game theory relies on the unrealistic assumption of (commonly known) perfect ration...
A model is proposed to explain the results of recent experiments in which subjects repeatedly played...
In economics, players are assumed to be rational: they exhibit self interested behavior and play equ...
Recent work on the evolution of social contracts and conventions has often used models of bargaining...
We report results from two different settings of a 3-player ultimatum game. Under the monocratic rul...
This paper studies the extent to which offers and demands in ultimatum games are consistent with equ...