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2001 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

An experimental study of coordination and learning in iterated two-market entry games

Authors : Amnon Rapoport, Darryl A. Seale, Eyal Winter

Published in: Advances in Experimental Markets

Publisher: Springer Berlin Heidelberg

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Tacit coordination in large groups is studied in an iterated market entry game with complete information and multiple market capacities that are varied randomly from period to period. On each period, each player must decide independently whether to enter any of the markets, and if entering, which of the two markets to enter. Across symmetric and asymmetric markets, we find remarkable coordination on the aggregate level, which is accounted for by the Nash equilibrium, together with considerable individual differences in frequency of entry and decision rules. With experience, the decisions of most players converge to decision rules with cutoff values on the combined market capacity that determine whether or not to enter but not which of the two markets to enter. This latter decision is determined probabilistically by the differential market capacities. The aggregate and individual results are accounted for quite well by a reinforcement-based learning model that combines deterministic and probabilistic elements.

Metadata
Title
An experimental study of coordination and learning in iterated two-market entry games
Authors
Amnon Rapoport
Darryl A. Seale
Eyal Winter
Copyright Year
2001
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-56448-2_10

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