[This item is a preserved copy. To view the original, visit http://econtheory.org/] In a general interdependent preference environment, we characterize when two payoff types can be distinguished by their rationalizable strategic choices without any prior knowledge of their beliefs and higher order beliefs. We show that two payoff types are strategically distinguishable if and only if they satisfy a separability condition. The separability condition for each agent essentially requires that there is not too much interdependence in preferences across agents. A social choice function, mapping payoff type profiles to outcomes, can be robustly virtually implemented if there exists a mechanism such that every equilibrium on every type...
Game theoretic modeling involves making assumptions on agents\u27 infinite hierarchies of beliefs. T...
A social choice function is robustly implementable if there is a mechanism under which the process o...
Game theoretic modeling involves making assumptions on agents\u27 infinite hierarchies of beliefs. T...
In a general interdependent preference environment, we characterize when two payoff types can be dist...
In a general interdependent preference environment, we characterize when two payoff types can be dist...
In a general interdependent preference environment, we characterize when two payoff types can be dist...
We consider robust virtual implementation, where robustness is the requirement that implementation s...
We consider robust virtual implementation, where robustness is the requirement that implementation s...
Bergemann and Morris (2009b) show that static mechanisms cannot robustly virtually implement noncons...
Robust virtual implementation asks if a social goal can be approximately achieved if merely the agen...
Artemov, Kunimoto, and Serrano (2009) show that, in quasilinear envi-ronments with incomplete inform...
In situations in which the social planner has to make several decisions over time, before agents hav...
A social choice function is robustly implementable if there is a mechanism under which the process o...
Consider a social choice correspondence as a mapping from preference profiles to lotteries over some...
A social choice function is robustly implementable if there is a mechanism under which the process o...
Game theoretic modeling involves making assumptions on agents\u27 infinite hierarchies of beliefs. T...
A social choice function is robustly implementable if there is a mechanism under which the process o...
Game theoretic modeling involves making assumptions on agents\u27 infinite hierarchies of beliefs. T...
In a general interdependent preference environment, we characterize when two payoff types can be dist...
In a general interdependent preference environment, we characterize when two payoff types can be dist...
In a general interdependent preference environment, we characterize when two payoff types can be dist...
We consider robust virtual implementation, where robustness is the requirement that implementation s...
We consider robust virtual implementation, where robustness is the requirement that implementation s...
Bergemann and Morris (2009b) show that static mechanisms cannot robustly virtually implement noncons...
Robust virtual implementation asks if a social goal can be approximately achieved if merely the agen...
Artemov, Kunimoto, and Serrano (2009) show that, in quasilinear envi-ronments with incomplete inform...
In situations in which the social planner has to make several decisions over time, before agents hav...
A social choice function is robustly implementable if there is a mechanism under which the process o...
Consider a social choice correspondence as a mapping from preference profiles to lotteries over some...
A social choice function is robustly implementable if there is a mechanism under which the process o...
Game theoretic modeling involves making assumptions on agents\u27 infinite hierarchies of beliefs. T...
A social choice function is robustly implementable if there is a mechanism under which the process o...
Game theoretic modeling involves making assumptions on agents\u27 infinite hierarchies of beliefs. T...