Published May 2012
| Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article
Open
Ignorance is Bliss: An Experimental Study of the Use of Ambiguity and Vagueness in the Coordination Games with Asymmetric Payoffs
- Creators
- Agranov, Marina
- Schotter, Andrew
Chicago
Abstract
We consider a game where one player, the Announcer, has to communicate the value of a payoff relevant state of the world to a set of players who play a coordination game with multiple equilibria. While the Announcer and the players agree that coordination is desirable, since the payoffs of the players at the equilibria are unequal, they disagree as to which equilibrium is best. We demonstrate experimentally that in such coordination games, in order to mask the asymmetry of equilibrium payoffs, it may be advantageous for a utilitarian benevolent Announcer to communicate in an ambiguous or vague manner.
Additional Information
© 2012 American Economic Association. This research was performed under grant number SES-0721111 of the National Science Foundation. We would also like to thank the Center for Experimental Social Science at New York University for its research.Attached Files
Published - ignorance_is_bliss.pdf
Supplemental Material - 2010-0152_app.pdf
Supplemental Material - 2010-0152_data.zip
Files
ignorance_is_bliss.pdf
Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 64860
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20160229-143431181
- NSF
- SES-0721111
- Created
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2016-02-29Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-10Created from EPrint's last_modified field