We study private communication in social networks prior to a majority vote on two alternative policies. Some (or all) agents receive a private imperfect signal about which policy is correct. They can, but need not, recommend a policy to their neighbors in the social network prior to the vote. We show theoretically and empirically that communication can undermine efficiency of the vote and hence reduce welfare in a common interest setting. Both efficiency and existence of fully informative equilibria in which vote recommendations are always truthfully given and followed hinge on the structure of the communication network. If some voters have distinctly larger audiences than others, their neighbors should not follow their vote recommendation;...
How does communication among voters affect turnout? And who benefits from it? In a laboratory experi...
This dissertation consists of three chapters. Chapter 1 reviews the literature on campaign effects, ...
One view of voting is that voters have inherently differ-ent preferences – de gustibus non est dispu...
We study private communication in social networks prior to a majority vote on two alternative polici...
We study communication in social networks prior to a majority vote on two alternative policies. Som...
With the ever increasing ubiquity of social networks in our everyday lives, comes an increasing urge...
This paper uses a randomized experiment to study whether social networks aect vote choice. In a erce...
People must integrate disparate sources of information when making decisions, especially in social c...
This paper studies a multiple-receiver Bayesian persuasion model, where a sender communicates with r...
In utilitarian social choice settings, agents have cardinal utilities over candidates, while for man...
With the advent of social media, the last decade has seen profound changes to the way people receive...
Decades of research suggest that social interaction influences opinion formation and affects voting ...
We propose a model of political persuasion in which a biased newspaper aims to convince voters to vo...
Consider n individuals who, by popular vote, choose among q ≥ 2 alternatives, one of which is “bette...
Classic social choice theory assumes that votes are independent (but possibly conditioned on an un-d...
How does communication among voters affect turnout? And who benefits from it? In a laboratory experi...
This dissertation consists of three chapters. Chapter 1 reviews the literature on campaign effects, ...
One view of voting is that voters have inherently differ-ent preferences – de gustibus non est dispu...
We study private communication in social networks prior to a majority vote on two alternative polici...
We study communication in social networks prior to a majority vote on two alternative policies. Som...
With the ever increasing ubiquity of social networks in our everyday lives, comes an increasing urge...
This paper uses a randomized experiment to study whether social networks aect vote choice. In a erce...
People must integrate disparate sources of information when making decisions, especially in social c...
This paper studies a multiple-receiver Bayesian persuasion model, where a sender communicates with r...
In utilitarian social choice settings, agents have cardinal utilities over candidates, while for man...
With the advent of social media, the last decade has seen profound changes to the way people receive...
Decades of research suggest that social interaction influences opinion formation and affects voting ...
We propose a model of political persuasion in which a biased newspaper aims to convince voters to vo...
Consider n individuals who, by popular vote, choose among q ≥ 2 alternatives, one of which is “bette...
Classic social choice theory assumes that votes are independent (but possibly conditioned on an un-d...
How does communication among voters affect turnout? And who benefits from it? In a laboratory experi...
This dissertation consists of three chapters. Chapter 1 reviews the literature on campaign effects, ...
One view of voting is that voters have inherently differ-ent preferences – de gustibus non est dispu...