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Published June 2010 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

Pinocchio's Pupil: Using Eyetracking and Pupil Dilation to Understand Truth Telling and Deception in Sender-Receiver Games

Abstract

We report experiments on sender-receiver games with an incentive for senders to exaggerate. Subjects "overcommunicate" -- messages are more informative of the true state than they should be, in equilibrium. Eyetracking shows that senders look at payoffs in a way that is consistent with a level-k model. A combination of sender messages and lookup patterns predicts the true state about twice as often as predicted by equilibrium. Using these measures to infer the state would enable receiver subjects to hypothetically earn 16-21 percent more than they actually do, an economic value of 60 percent of the maximum increment.

Additional Information

Research support was provided by an internal Provost grant, and a Human Frontiers of Society Program (HFSP) grant coordinated by Angela Sirigu, to the third author. Thanks to comments from Robert Ostling and Moran Surf, and the audience of the ESA 2005 North American Regional Meeting, Tucson, AZ. Original working title (2006) has slight variant on published version: Pinocchio's Pupil: Using Eyetracking and Pupil Dilation To Understand Truth-telling and Deception in Games.

Attached Files

Published - aer_2E100_2E3_2E984.pdf

Supplemental Material - 20060468_app.pdf

Supplemental Material - 20060468_data.zip

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