Strategy Method Effects in Centipede Games: An Optimal Design Approach
Strategy Method Effects in Centipede Games: An Optimal Design Approach
We explore the twin questions of when and why the strategy method creates behavioral distortions in the elicitation of choices in laboratory studies of sequential games. While such distortions have been widely documented, the theoretical forces driving these distortions remain poorly understood. In this paper, we compare behavior in six optimally designed centipede games, implemented under three different choice elicitation methods: the direct response method, the reduced strategy method and the full strategy method. These methods elicit behavioral strategies, reduced strategies, and complete strategies, respectively. We find significant behavioral differences across these elicitation methods -- differences that cannot be explained by standard game theory, but are consistent with the predictions of the Dynamic Cognitive Hierarchy solution (Lin and Palfrey, 2024), combined with quantal responses.
Shiang-Hung Hu、Po-Hsuan Lin、Thomas R. Palfrey、Joseph Tao-yi Wang、Yu-Hsiang Wang
经济学
Shiang-Hung Hu,Po-Hsuan Lin,Thomas R. Palfrey,Joseph Tao-yi Wang,Yu-Hsiang Wang.Strategy Method Effects in Centipede Games: An Optimal Design Approach[EB/OL].(2025-08-08)[2025-08-24].https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.06425.点此复制
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