看水晶球:一个关于名誉廉价谈话的实验室实验

Debrah Meloso, Salvatore Nunnari, M. Ottaviani
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引用次数: 2

摘要

我们通过实验研究了专家们因其见多识广的声誉而产生的信息传播。在我们的名誉廉价谈话游戏中,记者私下观察有关世界状态的信息,并向评估者发送信息;评价者使用消息和世界的实现状态来评估报告者的信息性。我们操纵了误报激励的关键驱动因素:预测现象的不确定性。我们强调三个发现。首先,即使真实的信息传递可以成为一种平衡策略,但错误的信息报道仍然普遍存在。第二,与理论一致的是,当国家存在更多的不确定性时,记者更有可能真实地传递信息。第三,评估者很难学习记者的策略,与理论相反,当记者更有可能误报时,评估者对信息准确性的反应更强烈。在一个有计算机化评估器的简单环境中,记者学会了最好地回应评估者的行为,当状态高度不确定且评估者容易轻信时,记者学会了真实地传递信息。本文被闫晨、行为经济学和决策分析等学科接受。资金:感谢H2020欧洲研究委员会[Grant 295835 (evaldea)]的财政支持。补充材料:在线附录和数据可在https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2022.4629上获得。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Looking into Crystal Balls: A Laboratory Experiment on Reputational Cheap Talk
We experimentally study information transmission by experts motivated by their reputation for being well-informed. In our game of reputational cheap talk, a reporter privately observes information about a state of the world and sends a message to an evaluator; the evaluator uses the message and the realized state of the world to assess the reporter’s informativeness. We manipulate the key driver of misreporting incentives: the uncertainty about the phenomenon to forecast. We highlight three findings. First, misreporting information is pervasive even when truthful information transmission can be an equilibrium strategy. Second, consistent with the theory, reporters are more likely to transmit information truthfully when there is more uncertainty on the state. Third, evaluators have difficulty learning reporters’ strategies and, contrary to the theory, assessments react more strongly to message accuracy when reporters are more likely to misreport. In a simpler environment with computerized evaluators, reporters learn to best reply to evaluators’ behavior and, when the state is highly uncertain and evaluators are credulous, to transmit information truthfully. This paper was accepted by Yan Chen, behavioral economics and decision analysis. Funding: Financial support from the H2020 European Research Council [Grant 295835 (EVALIDEA)] is gratefully acknowledged. Supplemental Material: The online appendix and data are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2022.4629 .
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