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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10016/3472

Google™ Scholar. Others By: Cabrales, Antonio - Nagel, Rosemarie - Armenter, Roc
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EE_2007_10_CA-ps.pdf2009-03-04 -- Available on Internet -- postprint363,48 kBAdobe PDFformato pdf
Title: Equilibrium Selection Through Incomplete Information in Coordination Games: An Experimental Study
Author(s): Cabrales, Antonio [acabrale]
Nagel, Rosemarie
Armenter, Roc
Publisher: Springer
Issued date: 2007
Citation: Experimental Economics, 2007, vol.10, p. 221-234
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10016/3472
ISSN: 1573-6938
DOI: 10.1007/s10683-007-9183-z
Abstract: We perform an experiment on a pure coordination game with uncertainty about the payoffs. Our game is closely related to models that have been used in many macroeconomic and financial applications to solve problems of equilibrium indeterminacy. In our experiment, each subject receives a noisy signal about the true payoffs. This game (inspired by the “global” games of Carlsson and van Damme, Econometrica, 61, 989–1018, 1993) has a unique strategy profile that survives the iterative deletion of strictly dominated strategies (thus a unique Nash equilibrium). The equilibrium outcome coincides, on average, with the risk-dominant equilibrium outcome of the underlying coordination game. In the baseline game, the behavior of the subjects converges to the theoretical prediction after enough experience has been gained. The data (and the comments) suggest that this behavior can be explained by learning. To test this hypothesis, we use a different game with incomplete information, related to a complete information game where learning and prior experiments suggest a different behavior. Indeed, in the second treatment, the behavior did not converge to equilibrium within 50 periods in some of the sessions.We also run both games under complete information. The results are sufficiently similar between complete and incomplete information to suggest that risk-dominance is also an important part of the explanation.
Review: PeerReviewed
Publisher version: http://www.springerlink.com/content/4131x7193u5r0712/fulltext.pdf
Keywords: Global games
Risk dominance
Equilibrium selection
common knowledge
Rights: © Economic Science Association
Appears in Collections:DE - Artículos de Revistas
Economists Online

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