Since no stable matching mechanism can induce truth-telling as a dominant strategy for all participants, there is often room in matching markets for strategic misrepresentation (Roth [25]). In this paper we study a natural form of strategic misrepresentation: reporting a truncation of one's true preference list. Roth and Rothblum [28] prove an important but abstract result: in certain symmetric, incomplete information settings, agents on one side of the market (“the women”) optimally submit some truncation of their true preference lists. In this paper we put structure on this truncation, both in symmetric and general settings, when agents must submit preference lists to the Men-Proposing Deferred Acceptance Algorithm. We first characterize ...
We study Bayesian Nash equilibria of stable mechanisms in centralized matching markets under incompl...
We study comparative statics of manipulations by women in the men-proposing de-ferred acceptance mec...
We analyze a dynamic search and matching model with non-transferable utility and asymmetric informat...
Since no stable matching mechanism can induce truth-telling as a dominant strategy for all participa...
In this paper we explore how the balance of agents on the two sides of a matching market impacts the...
We investigate strategic behavior in a centralized matching clearinghouse based on the Gale–Shapley ...
We study comparative statics of manipulations by women in the men-proposing deferred acceptance mech...
We test the effect of the amount of information on the strategies played by others in the theoretica...
Mechanisms which implement stable matchings are often observed to work well in practice, even in env...
Despite the truthful dominant strategy, participants in strategy-proof mechanisms submit manipulated...
Many centralized two-sided markets form a matching between participantsby running a stable marriage ...
Motivated by growing evidence of agents' mistakes in strategically simple environments, we propose a...
We consider two–sided many–to–many matching markets in which each worker may work for multiple firms...
We study comparative statics of manipulations by women in the men-proposing deferred acceptance mech...
Abstract We study comparative statics of manipulations by women in the men-proposing deferred accept...
We study Bayesian Nash equilibria of stable mechanisms in centralized matching markets under incompl...
We study comparative statics of manipulations by women in the men-proposing de-ferred acceptance mec...
We analyze a dynamic search and matching model with non-transferable utility and asymmetric informat...
Since no stable matching mechanism can induce truth-telling as a dominant strategy for all participa...
In this paper we explore how the balance of agents on the two sides of a matching market impacts the...
We investigate strategic behavior in a centralized matching clearinghouse based on the Gale–Shapley ...
We study comparative statics of manipulations by women in the men-proposing deferred acceptance mech...
We test the effect of the amount of information on the strategies played by others in the theoretica...
Mechanisms which implement stable matchings are often observed to work well in practice, even in env...
Despite the truthful dominant strategy, participants in strategy-proof mechanisms submit manipulated...
Many centralized two-sided markets form a matching between participantsby running a stable marriage ...
Motivated by growing evidence of agents' mistakes in strategically simple environments, we propose a...
We consider two–sided many–to–many matching markets in which each worker may work for multiple firms...
We study comparative statics of manipulations by women in the men-proposing deferred acceptance mech...
Abstract We study comparative statics of manipulations by women in the men-proposing deferred accept...
We study Bayesian Nash equilibria of stable mechanisms in centralized matching markets under incompl...
We study comparative statics of manipulations by women in the men-proposing de-ferred acceptance mec...
We analyze a dynamic search and matching model with non-transferable utility and asymmetric informat...