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Stated beliefs versus inferred beliefs: A methodological inquiry and experimental test
Institution:1. Emlyon Business School, GATE Lyon Saint-Étienne - Groupe d''analyse et de théorie économique, 23 Avenue Guy de Collongue, 69130, Ecully, France;2. Argyros School of Business and Economics, Economic Science Institute, Chapman University, One University Drive, Orange, CA 92866;3. Economic Science Institute, Chapman University, One University Drive, Orange, CA 92866;1. University of Melbourne, Australia;2. Maastricht University, The Netherlands;3. University of Pittsburgh, United States;4. NBER, United States;1. Fordham University, 441 East Fordham Road Bronx, NY 10458, USA;2. Whittier College, 13406 E, Philadelphia St, Whittier, CA 90602, USA
Abstract:Belief elicitation in game experiments may be problematic if it changes game play. We experimentally verify that belief elicitation can alter paths of play in a two-player repeated asymmetric matching pennies game. Importantly, this effect occurs only during early periods and only for players with strongly asymmetric payoffs, consistent with a cognitive/affective effect on priors that may serve as a substitute for experience. These effects occur with a common scoring rule elicitation procedure, but not with simpler (unmotivated) statements of expected choices of opponents. Scoring rule belief elicitation improves the goodness of fit of structural models of belief learning, and prior beliefs implied by such models are both stronger and more realistic when beliefs are elicited than when they are not. We also find that “inferred beliefs” (beliefs estimated from past observed actions of opponents) can predict observed actions better than the “stated beliefs” from scoring rule belief elicitation.
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