We study monotone equilibrium behavior in contests with observable effort (bid) where three or more participants have distinct risk attitudes and the monetary value for the prize of each is drawn independently from a distinct distribution. These differences can either cause a player to drop out, that is always choose zero effort regardless of his valuation, or use "all-or-nothing" strategies with discontinuous effort choice. Neither complete drop-out nor discontinuous bidding with finitely many gaps is consistent with pure strategy monotone Bayesian-Nash equilibrium in a contest with either ex-ante identical players or only two distinct participants.
Impact on rent seeking occurs even when a player exerts only one effort. This contrasts with models ...
This thesis presents an analysis on a class of asymmetric imperfectly discrim- inating multi-prize c...
In this paper, we consider a sequence of multi-prize all-pay auctions, where the contestants who exe...
We study tournaments with many ex-ante asymmetric contestants, whose valuations for the prize are in...
We study tournaments with many ex-ante asymmetric contestants, whose valuations for the prize are in...
We study tournaments with many ex-ante asymmetric (heterogeneous) contestants as an independent-priv...
The literature on imperfectly discriminating contests has almost exclusively focused on complete inf...
In a large class of multi-unit auctions of identical objects that includes the uniform-price, as-bid...
In this paper we investigate how heterogeneous agents choose among tournaments with different prizes...
In this paper we investigate how heterogeneous agents choose among tournaments with different prizes...
While the game-theoretic analysis of conflict is often based upon the assumption of multiplicative n...
We study Tullock’s (1980) n-player contest when each player has an independent prob-ability 0 < p...
We first consider the Nash equilibria for the two-player normal-form war of attrition, which is equi...
This paper considers n-player contests in which the size of the prize is endogenouslydetermined. In ...
We examine the equilibrium effort levels of individual players and groups in contests in which n gro...
Impact on rent seeking occurs even when a player exerts only one effort. This contrasts with models ...
This thesis presents an analysis on a class of asymmetric imperfectly discrim- inating multi-prize c...
In this paper, we consider a sequence of multi-prize all-pay auctions, where the contestants who exe...
We study tournaments with many ex-ante asymmetric contestants, whose valuations for the prize are in...
We study tournaments with many ex-ante asymmetric contestants, whose valuations for the prize are in...
We study tournaments with many ex-ante asymmetric (heterogeneous) contestants as an independent-priv...
The literature on imperfectly discriminating contests has almost exclusively focused on complete inf...
In a large class of multi-unit auctions of identical objects that includes the uniform-price, as-bid...
In this paper we investigate how heterogeneous agents choose among tournaments with different prizes...
In this paper we investigate how heterogeneous agents choose among tournaments with different prizes...
While the game-theoretic analysis of conflict is often based upon the assumption of multiplicative n...
We study Tullock’s (1980) n-player contest when each player has an independent prob-ability 0 < p...
We first consider the Nash equilibria for the two-player normal-form war of attrition, which is equi...
This paper considers n-player contests in which the size of the prize is endogenouslydetermined. In ...
We examine the equilibrium effort levels of individual players and groups in contests in which n gro...
Impact on rent seeking occurs even when a player exerts only one effort. This contrasts with models ...
This thesis presents an analysis on a class of asymmetric imperfectly discrim- inating multi-prize c...
In this paper, we consider a sequence of multi-prize all-pay auctions, where the contestants who exe...