We study the determinants of convergence to efficient conventions in coordination games played on networks, when agents focus on past performance (imitative play). Previous theoretical results provide an incomplete picture and suggest potentially-complex interactions between the features of dynamics and behavior. We conducted an extensive simulation study (with approximately 1.12 million simulations) varying network size, interaction and information radius, the probability of actual interaction, the probability of mistakes, tie-breaking rules, and the process governing revision opportunities. Our main result is that “more interactions,” be it in the form of larger interaction neighborhoods or of a higher interaction probability, lead to les...
Multiagent models of the emergence of social conventions have demonstrated that global conventions c...
Effective coordination is key to many situations that affect the well-being of two or more humans. S...
Restricting the analysis to general 2×2 coordination games, this article shows how under certain con...
We study the emergence of conventions in dynamic networks experimentally. Conventions are modeled in...
We consider minimum-effort games played in an arbitrary network. For a family of imitation behaviora...
Using data generated by extensive simulations of a process where individuals interact globally in a ...
We study how payoffs and network structure affect reaching the payoff-dominant equilibrium in a 2×2...
We study how payoffs and network structure affect reaching the payoff-dominant equilibrium in a [For...
We study the role of local effects and finite size effects in reaching coordination and in equilibri...
The primary question in coordination games concerns the possibility of achieving efficient coordinat...
Why are some behaviors governed by strong social conventions while others are not? We experimentally...
Effective coordination is key to many situations that affect the well-being of two or more humans. S...
We experimentally study equilibrium selection in repeated coordination games played on networks. We ...
We study the role of local effects and finite size effects in reaching coordination and in equilibri...
Multiagent models of the emergence of social conventions have demonstrated that global conventions c...
Effective coordination is key to many situations that affect the well-being of two or more humans. S...
Restricting the analysis to general 2×2 coordination games, this article shows how under certain con...
We study the emergence of conventions in dynamic networks experimentally. Conventions are modeled in...
We consider minimum-effort games played in an arbitrary network. For a family of imitation behaviora...
Using data generated by extensive simulations of a process where individuals interact globally in a ...
We study how payoffs and network structure affect reaching the payoff-dominant equilibrium in a 2×2...
We study how payoffs and network structure affect reaching the payoff-dominant equilibrium in a [For...
We study the role of local effects and finite size effects in reaching coordination and in equilibri...
The primary question in coordination games concerns the possibility of achieving efficient coordinat...
Why are some behaviors governed by strong social conventions while others are not? We experimentally...
Effective coordination is key to many situations that affect the well-being of two or more humans. S...
We experimentally study equilibrium selection in repeated coordination games played on networks. We ...
We study the role of local effects and finite size effects in reaching coordination and in equilibri...
Multiagent models of the emergence of social conventions have demonstrated that global conventions c...
Effective coordination is key to many situations that affect the well-being of two or more humans. S...
Restricting the analysis to general 2×2 coordination games, this article shows how under certain con...