Network architecture, salience and coordination |
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Authors: | Syngjoo Choi Douglas Gale Shachar Kariv Thomas Palfrey |
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Affiliation: | aUniversity College London, United Kingdom;bNew York University, United States;cUniversity of California, Berkeley, United States;dCalifornia Institute of Technology, United States |
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Abstract: | This paper reports the results of an experimental investigation of dynamic games in networks. In each period, the subjects simultaneously choose whether or not to make an irreversible contribution to the provision of an indivisible public good. Subjects observe the past actions of other subjects if and only if they are connected by the network. Networks may be incomplete so subjects are asymmetrically informed about the actions of other subjects in the same network, which is typically an obstacle to the attainment of an efficient outcome. For all networks, the game has a large set of (possibly inefficient) equilibrium outcomes. Nonetheless, the network architecture makes certain strategies salient and this in turn facilitates coordination on efficient outcomes. In particular, asymmetries in the network architecture encourage two salient behaviors, strategic delay and strategic commitment. By contrast, we find that symmetries in the network architecture can lead to mis-coordination and inefficient outcomes. |
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Keywords: | JEL classification: D82 D83 C92 |
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