"We study contests in which contestants choose both work effort and the variance of output (risk). Winner-take-all contests generate incentives for contestants to engage in costly risk taking, which is inefficient if the contest organizer values the aggregate output of all contestants. The addition of a penalty for ranking last (retaining a prize for ranking first) enables the organizer to independently control contestants' incentives to exert productive effort and to increase output variance. In this way, the organizer can eliminate risk-seeking behavior in settings where it is wasteful, but also control risk seeking when it is desirable, such as in research tournaments. "("JEL "J33, C72) Copyright (c) 2008 Western Economic Association Int...
This paper experimentally investigates excessive risk taking in contest schemes by implementing a no...
We study optimal contest design in situations where the designer can reward high perfor-mance agents...
We study optimal contest design in situations where the designer can reward high perfor-mance agents...
We study selection contests in which the strategic variable is degree of risk rather than amount of ...
We study selection contests in which the strategic variable is degree of risk rather than amount of ...
We study selection contests in which the strategic variable is degree of risk rather than amount of ...
In a tournament, a principal sets a prize, and several agents then compete to attain the highest obs...
We study selection contests in which the strategic variable is degree of risk rather than amount of ...
In a tournament, a principal sets a prize, and several agents then compete to attain the highest obs...
In a tournament, a principal sets a prize, and several agents then compete to attain the highest obs...
It has been established in the literature that, under the assumption of risk-neutral contestants, it...
International audienceThis paper studies the role of risk attitudes in determining the optimality of...
International audienceThis paper studies the role of risk attitudes in determining the optimality of...
In a contest, participants spend money or effort to increase their chances of winning a prize. The a...
We conduct a contest experiment where participants can invest in increasing both the mean and the sp...
This paper experimentally investigates excessive risk taking in contest schemes by implementing a no...
We study optimal contest design in situations where the designer can reward high perfor-mance agents...
We study optimal contest design in situations where the designer can reward high perfor-mance agents...
We study selection contests in which the strategic variable is degree of risk rather than amount of ...
We study selection contests in which the strategic variable is degree of risk rather than amount of ...
We study selection contests in which the strategic variable is degree of risk rather than amount of ...
In a tournament, a principal sets a prize, and several agents then compete to attain the highest obs...
We study selection contests in which the strategic variable is degree of risk rather than amount of ...
In a tournament, a principal sets a prize, and several agents then compete to attain the highest obs...
In a tournament, a principal sets a prize, and several agents then compete to attain the highest obs...
It has been established in the literature that, under the assumption of risk-neutral contestants, it...
International audienceThis paper studies the role of risk attitudes in determining the optimality of...
International audienceThis paper studies the role of risk attitudes in determining the optimality of...
In a contest, participants spend money or effort to increase their chances of winning a prize. The a...
We conduct a contest experiment where participants can invest in increasing both the mean and the sp...
This paper experimentally investigates excessive risk taking in contest schemes by implementing a no...
We study optimal contest design in situations where the designer can reward high perfor-mance agents...
We study optimal contest design in situations where the designer can reward high perfor-mance agents...