Language is arguably a powerful coordination device in real-life interactions. We here develop a game-theoretic model of pre-play communication that generalizes the cheap-talk approach by way of introducing a meaning correspondence between messages and actions, and postulating two axioms met by natural languages. Deviations from this correspondence are called dishonest and players have a lexicographic preference for honesty, second to material payoffs. The model is first applied to two-sided preplay communication in finite and symmetric two-player games and we establish that, in generic and symmetric n × n - coordination games, a Nash equilibrium component in such a lexicographic communication game is evolutionarily stable if and only if it...
Demichelis and Weibull (2008 AER) show that adding lexicographic lying costs to coordination games w...
Demichelis and Weibull (2008 AER) show that adding lexicographic lying costs to coordination games w...
Parallel sessions - Session II: paper no. 43Open URL - http://loft2010.csc.liv.ac.uk/INTRODUCTION: I...
Language is arguably a powerful coordination device in real-life interactions. We here develop a gam...
Language is arguably a powerful coordination device in real-life interactions. We here develop a gam...
Language is arguably a powerful coordination device in real-life interactions. We here develop a gam...
Language is arguably a powerful coordination device in real-life interactions. We here develop a gam...
Language is arguably a powerful coordination device in real-life interactions. We here develop a gam...
Language is a powerful coordination device. We generalize the cheap-talk approach to pre-play commun...
Language is a powerful coordination device. We generalize the cheap-talk approach to pre-play commu...
Demichelis and Weibull (2008 AER) show that adding lexicographic lying costs to coordination games w...
Demichelis and Weibull (2008 AER) show that adding lexicographic lying costs to coordination games w...
Demichelis and Weibull (2008 AER) show that adding lexicographic lying costs to coordination games w...
Abstract. We here develop a model of pre-play communication that generalizes the cheap-talk approach...
Demichelis and Weibull (2008 AER) show that adding lexicographic lying costs to coordination games w...
Demichelis and Weibull (2008 AER) show that adding lexicographic lying costs to coordination games w...
Demichelis and Weibull (2008 AER) show that adding lexicographic lying costs to coordination games w...
Parallel sessions - Session II: paper no. 43Open URL - http://loft2010.csc.liv.ac.uk/INTRODUCTION: I...
Language is arguably a powerful coordination device in real-life interactions. We here develop a gam...
Language is arguably a powerful coordination device in real-life interactions. We here develop a gam...
Language is arguably a powerful coordination device in real-life interactions. We here develop a gam...
Language is arguably a powerful coordination device in real-life interactions. We here develop a gam...
Language is arguably a powerful coordination device in real-life interactions. We here develop a gam...
Language is a powerful coordination device. We generalize the cheap-talk approach to pre-play commun...
Language is a powerful coordination device. We generalize the cheap-talk approach to pre-play commu...
Demichelis and Weibull (2008 AER) show that adding lexicographic lying costs to coordination games w...
Demichelis and Weibull (2008 AER) show that adding lexicographic lying costs to coordination games w...
Demichelis and Weibull (2008 AER) show that adding lexicographic lying costs to coordination games w...
Abstract. We here develop a model of pre-play communication that generalizes the cheap-talk approach...
Demichelis and Weibull (2008 AER) show that adding lexicographic lying costs to coordination games w...
Demichelis and Weibull (2008 AER) show that adding lexicographic lying costs to coordination games w...
Demichelis and Weibull (2008 AER) show that adding lexicographic lying costs to coordination games w...
Parallel sessions - Session II: paper no. 43Open URL - http://loft2010.csc.liv.ac.uk/INTRODUCTION: I...