We report experimental results on one-shot two person 3x3 constant sum games played by non-economists without previous experience in the laboratory. Although strategically our games are very similar to previous experiments in which game theory predictions fail dramatically, 80% of actions taken in our experiment coincided with the prediction of the unique Nash equilibrium in pure strategies and 73% of actions were best responses to elicited beliefs. We argue how social preferences, presentation effects and belief elicitation procedures may influence how subjects play in simple but non trivial games and explain the diferences we observe with respect to previous work
Many important decisions require strategic sophistication. We examine experimentally whether teams a...
Players cooperate in experiments more than game theory would predict. We introduce the ‘returns-base...
Players cooperate in experiments more than game theory would predict. We introduce the ‘returns-base...
We report experimental results on one-shot two person 3x3 constant sum games played by non-economist...
We report experimental results on a series of ten one-shot two-person 3x3 normal form games with uni...
Using data on one-shot games, we investigate whether players ’ actions can be viewed as responses to...
Using data on one-shot games, we investigate whether players' actions can be viewed as responses to ...
Several recent studies in experimental economics have tried to measure beliefs of subjects engaged i...
To understand cooperative behaviour in social-dilemma experiments, we need to understand the game pa...
To understand cooperative behaviour in social-dilemma experiments, we need to understand the game pa...
Using data on one-shot games, we investigate the assumption that players respond to underlying expec...
We use the model developed in Sarin and Vahid (1999, GEB) to explain the experiments reported in Ere...
Several recent studies in experimental economics have tried to measure beliefs of subjects engaged i...
This paper concerns the interpretation of equilibrium in non-additive beliefs in two-player normal f...
We introduce a simple procedure to be used for selecting the strategies most likely to be played by ...
Many important decisions require strategic sophistication. We examine experimentally whether teams a...
Players cooperate in experiments more than game theory would predict. We introduce the ‘returns-base...
Players cooperate in experiments more than game theory would predict. We introduce the ‘returns-base...
We report experimental results on one-shot two person 3x3 constant sum games played by non-economist...
We report experimental results on a series of ten one-shot two-person 3x3 normal form games with uni...
Using data on one-shot games, we investigate whether players ’ actions can be viewed as responses to...
Using data on one-shot games, we investigate whether players' actions can be viewed as responses to ...
Several recent studies in experimental economics have tried to measure beliefs of subjects engaged i...
To understand cooperative behaviour in social-dilemma experiments, we need to understand the game pa...
To understand cooperative behaviour in social-dilemma experiments, we need to understand the game pa...
Using data on one-shot games, we investigate the assumption that players respond to underlying expec...
We use the model developed in Sarin and Vahid (1999, GEB) to explain the experiments reported in Ere...
Several recent studies in experimental economics have tried to measure beliefs of subjects engaged i...
This paper concerns the interpretation of equilibrium in non-additive beliefs in two-player normal f...
We introduce a simple procedure to be used for selecting the strategies most likely to be played by ...
Many important decisions require strategic sophistication. We examine experimentally whether teams a...
Players cooperate in experiments more than game theory would predict. We introduce the ‘returns-base...
Players cooperate in experiments more than game theory would predict. We introduce the ‘returns-base...