We study to what extent information aggregation in social learning environments is robust to slight misperceptions of others’ characteristics (e.g., tastes or risk attitudes). We consider a population of agents who obtain information about the state of the world both from initial private signals and by observing a random sample of other agents’ actions over time, where agents’ actions depend not only on their beliefs about the state but also on their idiosyncratic types. When agents are correct about the type distribution in the population, they learn the true state in the long run. By contrast, our first main result shows that even arbitrarily small amounts of misperception can generate extreme breakdowns of information aggregation, wherein...
We study how effectively a group of rational agents learns from repeatedly observing each others' ac...
People's payoffs are often jointly determined by their action and an unobserved common payoff releva...
Motivated by the fact that people’s perceptions of their societies are routinely incorrect, we study...
We study to what extent information aggregation in social learning environments is robust to slight ...
We study social learning in a continuous action space experiment. Subjects, acting in sequence, stat...
Over the past few years, online social networks have become nearly ubiquitous, reshaping our social ...
This dissertation explores economic implications of misinferring from others' behavior. The first t...
Integrating information gained by observing others via Social Bayesian Learning can be beneficial fo...
Misinformation has emerged as a major societal challenge in the wake of the 2016 U.S. elections, Bre...
We provide a model to investigate the tension between information aggregation and spread of misinfor...
Over the past few years, online social networks have become nearly ubiquitous, reshaping our social ...
A major problem that resulted from the massive use of social media networks is the diffusion of inco...
We revisit the economic models of social learning by assuming that individuals update their beliefs ...
We study social learning in a continuous action space experiment. Subjects, acting in sequence, stat...
We present an approach to analyze learning outcomes in a broad class of misspecified environments, sp...
We study how effectively a group of rational agents learns from repeatedly observing each others' ac...
People's payoffs are often jointly determined by their action and an unobserved common payoff releva...
Motivated by the fact that people’s perceptions of their societies are routinely incorrect, we study...
We study to what extent information aggregation in social learning environments is robust to slight ...
We study social learning in a continuous action space experiment. Subjects, acting in sequence, stat...
Over the past few years, online social networks have become nearly ubiquitous, reshaping our social ...
This dissertation explores economic implications of misinferring from others' behavior. The first t...
Integrating information gained by observing others via Social Bayesian Learning can be beneficial fo...
Misinformation has emerged as a major societal challenge in the wake of the 2016 U.S. elections, Bre...
We provide a model to investigate the tension between information aggregation and spread of misinfor...
Over the past few years, online social networks have become nearly ubiquitous, reshaping our social ...
A major problem that resulted from the massive use of social media networks is the diffusion of inco...
We revisit the economic models of social learning by assuming that individuals update their beliefs ...
We study social learning in a continuous action space experiment. Subjects, acting in sequence, stat...
We present an approach to analyze learning outcomes in a broad class of misspecified environments, sp...
We study how effectively a group of rational agents learns from repeatedly observing each others' ac...
People's payoffs are often jointly determined by their action and an unobserved common payoff releva...
Motivated by the fact that people’s perceptions of their societies are routinely incorrect, we study...