This article uses basic facts from the psychology of attention to show how the limited attention of consumers affects economic competition. The article determines endogenously whether an economy is information rich or information poor. A conventional economic equilibrium results if subjects have spare attention capacity. At the positive level, the respective impacts of advances in information technology, international integration and the media on equilibrium diversity and level of attention-seeking activities are shown. At the normative level, the issues of welfare, efficiency and optimal policy interventions are addressed. Copyright � The Author(s). Journal compilation � Royal Economic Society 2008.
Most prices in the information economy (scientific information) are based on length of information, ...
Economists have studied for a long time how decision-makers allocate scarce re-sources. The recent l...
We propose a model of competitive attention based on two key premises: i) People have limited inform...
Attention has become a critical resource for decision-making in the digital age. But differing appro...
A new theoretical model is developed which describes the structure of competition for attention and ...
This article presents a tractable framework that embeds the allocation of limited attention into com...
Attracting attention is a basic feature of economic life but no standard economic problem. A new the...
This article provides an introduction to the literature addressing the causes and consequences of li...
I investigate the effects of exogenously restricted consumer attention on equilibrium price, diversi...
International audienceThis article describes a participatory form of the attention economy, as oppos...
This article describes a participatory form of the attention economy, as opposed to another form, th...
This article takes stock of the increasing interest that the economic profession has shown for the r...
I present a game-theoretic model where economic competition and attention competition are interdepen...
Virtually all forms of openness can be motivated by the scarcity of attention, the lynchpin of the A...
I investigate the effects of exogenously restricted consumer attention on equilibrium price, diversi...
Most prices in the information economy (scientific information) are based on length of information, ...
Economists have studied for a long time how decision-makers allocate scarce re-sources. The recent l...
We propose a model of competitive attention based on two key premises: i) People have limited inform...
Attention has become a critical resource for decision-making in the digital age. But differing appro...
A new theoretical model is developed which describes the structure of competition for attention and ...
This article presents a tractable framework that embeds the allocation of limited attention into com...
Attracting attention is a basic feature of economic life but no standard economic problem. A new the...
This article provides an introduction to the literature addressing the causes and consequences of li...
I investigate the effects of exogenously restricted consumer attention on equilibrium price, diversi...
International audienceThis article describes a participatory form of the attention economy, as oppos...
This article describes a participatory form of the attention economy, as opposed to another form, th...
This article takes stock of the increasing interest that the economic profession has shown for the r...
I present a game-theoretic model where economic competition and attention competition are interdepen...
Virtually all forms of openness can be motivated by the scarcity of attention, the lynchpin of the A...
I investigate the effects of exogenously restricted consumer attention on equilibrium price, diversi...
Most prices in the information economy (scientific information) are based on length of information, ...
Economists have studied for a long time how decision-makers allocate scarce re-sources. The recent l...
We propose a model of competitive attention based on two key premises: i) People have limited inform...