The need for efficient coordination is ubiquitous in organizations and industries. The literature on the determinants of efficient coordination has focused on individual decision making so far. In reality, however, teams often have to coordinate with other teams. We present a series of coordination experiments with a total of 1,101 participants. We find that teams of three subjects each coordinate much more efficiently than individuals. This finding adds one important cornerstone to the recent literature on the conditions for successful coordination. We explain the differences between individuals and teams using the experience weighted attraction learning model
In a laboratory experiment, we investigate the interaction of two prominent firm strategies to incre...
Many organizations suffer poor performance because its members fail to coordinate on efficient patte...
We conduct an experiment on a minority-of-three game in which each player is a team composed of thre...
The need for efficient coordination is ubiquitous in organizations and industries. The literature on...
The need for efficient coordination is ubiquitous in organizations and industries. The literature on...
In this paper, we present a large-scale experimental study in order to examine whether individuals o...
this paper, we examine the strategies managerial teams use to achieve coordination and the effects o...
Individuals often need to coordinate with others to pursue and achieve goals. However, individuals o...
Motivated by previous research on coordination problems and incentive design in organizations, we co...
We study the coordination in a group of humans by means of experiments and simulations. Experiments ...
Humans and other intelligent agents often rely on collective decision making based on an intuition t...
The relationship between team size and productivity is a question of broad relevance across economic...
n the first chapter, I present an experimental analysis of weak-link coordination games in which sub...
We consider data from an experiment on the minimum-effort game, repeated over many periods. In each ...
Experimental studies of coordination games consistently show that large groups are unable to escape ...
In a laboratory experiment, we investigate the interaction of two prominent firm strategies to incre...
Many organizations suffer poor performance because its members fail to coordinate on efficient patte...
We conduct an experiment on a minority-of-three game in which each player is a team composed of thre...
The need for efficient coordination is ubiquitous in organizations and industries. The literature on...
The need for efficient coordination is ubiquitous in organizations and industries. The literature on...
In this paper, we present a large-scale experimental study in order to examine whether individuals o...
this paper, we examine the strategies managerial teams use to achieve coordination and the effects o...
Individuals often need to coordinate with others to pursue and achieve goals. However, individuals o...
Motivated by previous research on coordination problems and incentive design in organizations, we co...
We study the coordination in a group of humans by means of experiments and simulations. Experiments ...
Humans and other intelligent agents often rely on collective decision making based on an intuition t...
The relationship between team size and productivity is a question of broad relevance across economic...
n the first chapter, I present an experimental analysis of weak-link coordination games in which sub...
We consider data from an experiment on the minimum-effort game, repeated over many periods. In each ...
Experimental studies of coordination games consistently show that large groups are unable to escape ...
In a laboratory experiment, we investigate the interaction of two prominent firm strategies to incre...
Many organizations suffer poor performance because its members fail to coordinate on efficient patte...
We conduct an experiment on a minority-of-three game in which each player is a team composed of thre...