We investigate whether experimental participants follow their private information and contradict herds in situations where it is empirically optimal to do so. We consider two sequences of players, an observed and an unobserved sequence. Observed players sequentially predict which of two options has been randomly chosen with the help of a medium quality private signal. Unobserved players predict which of the two options has been randomly chosen knowing previous choices of observed and with the help of a low, medium or high quality signal. We use preprogrammed computers as observed players in half the experimental sessions. Our new evidence suggests that participants are prone to a 'social-confirmation' bias and it gives support to the argume...
This paper examines the occurrence and fragility of information cascades in laboratory experiments. ...
Humans are social animals. In everyday life, people rarely make important decisions solely based on ...
We study herd behavior in a laboratory \u85nancial market with -nancial market professionals. An imp...
We investigate whether experimental participants follow their private information and contradict her...
In social-learning environments, we investigate implications of the assumption that people naïvely b...
We report on an experiment that distinguishes between rational social learning and behavioral inform...
We show that far from capturing a formally new phenomenon, informational herding is really a special...
We document heterogeneity of rationality and bias in information acquisition in a social learning ex...
An “information cascade” occurs when initial decisions coincide in a way that it is optimal for each...
The paper presents a new meta data set covering 13 experiments on the social learning games by Bikhc...
We study the role of social preferences in explaining herding behavior in anonymous risky environmen...
This paper reports an experimental test of how, when observing others' actions, participants learn m...
Social conformity and information‐based herding have been studied extensively in the social sciences...
AbstractWe report a controlled laboratory experiment examining risk-taking and information aggregati...
We use a revealed preference approach to disentangle conformity, an intrinsic taste to follow others...
This paper examines the occurrence and fragility of information cascades in laboratory experiments. ...
Humans are social animals. In everyday life, people rarely make important decisions solely based on ...
We study herd behavior in a laboratory \u85nancial market with -nancial market professionals. An imp...
We investigate whether experimental participants follow their private information and contradict her...
In social-learning environments, we investigate implications of the assumption that people naïvely b...
We report on an experiment that distinguishes between rational social learning and behavioral inform...
We show that far from capturing a formally new phenomenon, informational herding is really a special...
We document heterogeneity of rationality and bias in information acquisition in a social learning ex...
An “information cascade” occurs when initial decisions coincide in a way that it is optimal for each...
The paper presents a new meta data set covering 13 experiments on the social learning games by Bikhc...
We study the role of social preferences in explaining herding behavior in anonymous risky environmen...
This paper reports an experimental test of how, when observing others' actions, participants learn m...
Social conformity and information‐based herding have been studied extensively in the social sciences...
AbstractWe report a controlled laboratory experiment examining risk-taking and information aggregati...
We use a revealed preference approach to disentangle conformity, an intrinsic taste to follow others...
This paper examines the occurrence and fragility of information cascades in laboratory experiments. ...
Humans are social animals. In everyday life, people rarely make important decisions solely based on ...
We study herd behavior in a laboratory \u85nancial market with -nancial market professionals. An imp...