We use a laboratory experiment to compare the way groups and individuals behave in an inter-temporal common pool dilemma. The experimental design distinguishes between a non-strategic problem where players (individuals or groups of three) make decisions without interaction and a strategic part where players harvest from a common pool. This allows us to correct for differences between individuals and groups in the quality of decisions when testing for differences in competitiveness. Group decisions are either made by majority rule or unanimity. The results show that groups are less myopic than individuals (i.e., they make qualitatively better decisions) but that they are more competitive than individuals when placed in a strategic setting. T...
Many decisions are interactive; the outcome of one party depends not only on its decisions or on act...
This paper investigates the rationality of group decisions versus individual decisions under risk. W...
Two experiments utilized a new experimental paradigm—the Intergroup Prisoner’s Dilemma— Maximizing D...
We use a laboratory experiment to compare the way groups and individuals behave in an inter-temporal...
Two experiments compared the Centipede game played either by 2 individuals or by 2 (3-person) groups...
Most studies that compare individual and group behavior neglect the in-group decision making process...
Hardin’s (1968) ‘Tragedy of the commons’, various fields, including economics, social sciences, cons...
Using a common pool resource game protocol with voting we examine experimentally how cooperation var...
We revisit the phenomenon that group decisions differ systematically from decisions of individuals. ...
This paper reports an experiment that examines whether groups can make better decisions than individ...
This paper uses three different experimental treatments – a standard two-player Prisoner’s Dilemma, ...
Groups make decisions more rational than individuals do. This may depend by several factors. The lea...
Both mainstream economics and its critics have focused on models of individual rational agents. But ...
Consider a parliamentary committee with an equal number of coalition and opposition members. The opp...
In minority games, players in a group must decide at each round which of two available options to ch...
Many decisions are interactive; the outcome of one party depends not only on its decisions or on act...
This paper investigates the rationality of group decisions versus individual decisions under risk. W...
Two experiments utilized a new experimental paradigm—the Intergroup Prisoner’s Dilemma— Maximizing D...
We use a laboratory experiment to compare the way groups and individuals behave in an inter-temporal...
Two experiments compared the Centipede game played either by 2 individuals or by 2 (3-person) groups...
Most studies that compare individual and group behavior neglect the in-group decision making process...
Hardin’s (1968) ‘Tragedy of the commons’, various fields, including economics, social sciences, cons...
Using a common pool resource game protocol with voting we examine experimentally how cooperation var...
We revisit the phenomenon that group decisions differ systematically from decisions of individuals. ...
This paper reports an experiment that examines whether groups can make better decisions than individ...
This paper uses three different experimental treatments – a standard two-player Prisoner’s Dilemma, ...
Groups make decisions more rational than individuals do. This may depend by several factors. The lea...
Both mainstream economics and its critics have focused on models of individual rational agents. But ...
Consider a parliamentary committee with an equal number of coalition and opposition members. The opp...
In minority games, players in a group must decide at each round which of two available options to ch...
Many decisions are interactive; the outcome of one party depends not only on its decisions or on act...
This paper investigates the rationality of group decisions versus individual decisions under risk. W...
Two experiments utilized a new experimental paradigm—the Intergroup Prisoner’s Dilemma— Maximizing D...