Humans often lie strategically. We study this problem in an ultimatum game involving informed proposers and uninformed responders, where the former can send an unverifiable statement about their endowment. If there are some intrinsically honest proposers, a simple message game shows that the rest of them are likely to declare a lower-than-actual endowment to the responders. In the second part of the paper, we report on an experiment testing this game. On average, 88.5% of the proposers understate the actual endowment by 20.5%. Regression analysis shows that a one-dollar gap between the actual and declared amounts prompts proposers to reduce their offer by 19 cents. However, responders appear not to take such claims seriously, and thus the f...
International audienceThis paper proposes an equilibrium approach to belief manipulation and decepti...
International audienceThis paper proposes an equilibrium approach to belief manipulation and decepti...
Situations such as an entrepreneur overstating a project's value, or a superior choosing to under or...
Humans often lie strategically. We study this problem in an ultimatum game involving informed propos...
Humans often lie strategically. We study this problem in an ultimatum game involving informed propos...
Humans can lie strategically in order to leverage on their negotiation power. For instance, governme...
Humans can lie strategically in order to leverage on their negotiation power. For instance, governme...
Humans can lie strategically in order to leverage on their negotiation power. For instance, governme...
We introduce the taxicab game, related to the ultimatum game and Gehrig et al.'s (2007) yes/no game....
Situations such as an entrepreneur overstating a project’s value, or a superior choosing to under or...
Situations such as an entrepreneur overstating a project’s value, or a superior choosing to under or...
Situations such as an entrepreneur overstating a project’s value, or a superior choosing to under or...
We modify the Acquiring-a-Company game to study how information leaks affect lying and market outcom...
We modify the Acquiring-a-Company game to study how information leaks affect lying and market outcom...
"We experimentally investigate the effect of cheap talk in a bargaining game with one-sided asymmetr...
International audienceThis paper proposes an equilibrium approach to belief manipulation and decepti...
International audienceThis paper proposes an equilibrium approach to belief manipulation and decepti...
Situations such as an entrepreneur overstating a project's value, or a superior choosing to under or...
Humans often lie strategically. We study this problem in an ultimatum game involving informed propos...
Humans often lie strategically. We study this problem in an ultimatum game involving informed propos...
Humans can lie strategically in order to leverage on their negotiation power. For instance, governme...
Humans can lie strategically in order to leverage on their negotiation power. For instance, governme...
Humans can lie strategically in order to leverage on their negotiation power. For instance, governme...
We introduce the taxicab game, related to the ultimatum game and Gehrig et al.'s (2007) yes/no game....
Situations such as an entrepreneur overstating a project’s value, or a superior choosing to under or...
Situations such as an entrepreneur overstating a project’s value, or a superior choosing to under or...
Situations such as an entrepreneur overstating a project’s value, or a superior choosing to under or...
We modify the Acquiring-a-Company game to study how information leaks affect lying and market outcom...
We modify the Acquiring-a-Company game to study how information leaks affect lying and market outcom...
"We experimentally investigate the effect of cheap talk in a bargaining game with one-sided asymmetr...
International audienceThis paper proposes an equilibrium approach to belief manipulation and decepti...
International audienceThis paper proposes an equilibrium approach to belief manipulation and decepti...
Situations such as an entrepreneur overstating a project's value, or a superior choosing to under or...