Timing is crucial in situations ranging from product introductions, to currency attacks, to starting a revolution. These settings share the feature that payoffs depend critically on the timing of moves of a few other key players—and these are uncertain. To capture this, we introduce the notion of clock games and experimentally test them. Each player’s clock starts on receiving a signal about a payoff-relevant state variable. Since the timing of the signals is random, clocks are de-synchronized. A player must decide how long, if at all, to delay his move after receiving the signal. We show that (i) equilibrium is always characterized by strategic delay—regardless of whether moves are observable or not; (ii) delay decreases as clocks become m...
[This item is a preserved copy. To view the original, visit http://econtheory.org/] There...
Abstract: In a repeated game with imperfect public information, the set of equilibria depends on the...
There are two varieties of timing games in economics: In a war of attrition, more predecessors helps...
Timing is crucial in situations ranging from currency attacks, to product introductions, to starting...
Previous studies have shown that simply knowing one player moves first can affect behavior in games,...
Previous studies have shown that simply knowing one player moves first can affect behavior in games,...
We investigate the role of information and endogenous timing of decisions on co-ordination. In a glo...
We study an optimal timing decision problem where an agent endowed with a risky investment opportuni...
In clock games, agents receive differently-timed private signals when an asset value is above its fu...
Time plays a crucial role in the intuitive understanding of the world around us. Within quantum mech...
The Aumann (1990) conjecture states that cheap-talk messages do not neces-sarily help to coordinate ...
We extend the folk theorem of repeated games to two settings in which players ’ information about ot...
Reciprocity is common in economic and social domains, and it has been widely documented in the labor...
Previous studies have shown that simply knowing some players move first can affect behavior in games...
Abstract: In a repeated game with imperfect public information, the set of equilibria depends on the...
[This item is a preserved copy. To view the original, visit http://econtheory.org/] There...
Abstract: In a repeated game with imperfect public information, the set of equilibria depends on the...
There are two varieties of timing games in economics: In a war of attrition, more predecessors helps...
Timing is crucial in situations ranging from currency attacks, to product introductions, to starting...
Previous studies have shown that simply knowing one player moves first can affect behavior in games,...
Previous studies have shown that simply knowing one player moves first can affect behavior in games,...
We investigate the role of information and endogenous timing of decisions on co-ordination. In a glo...
We study an optimal timing decision problem where an agent endowed with a risky investment opportuni...
In clock games, agents receive differently-timed private signals when an asset value is above its fu...
Time plays a crucial role in the intuitive understanding of the world around us. Within quantum mech...
The Aumann (1990) conjecture states that cheap-talk messages do not neces-sarily help to coordinate ...
We extend the folk theorem of repeated games to two settings in which players ’ information about ot...
Reciprocity is common in economic and social domains, and it has been widely documented in the labor...
Previous studies have shown that simply knowing some players move first can affect behavior in games...
Abstract: In a repeated game with imperfect public information, the set of equilibria depends on the...
[This item is a preserved copy. To view the original, visit http://econtheory.org/] There...
Abstract: In a repeated game with imperfect public information, the set of equilibria depends on the...
There are two varieties of timing games in economics: In a war of attrition, more predecessors helps...