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Evidential Equilibria: Heuristics and Biases in Static Games of Complete Information

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posted on 2016-01-05, 12:42 authored by Ali al-Nowaihi, Sanjit Dhami
Standard equilibrium concepts in game theory find it difficult to explain the empirical evidence from a large number of static games, including the prisoners’ dilemma game, the hawk-dove game, voting games, public goods games and oligopoly games. Under uncertainty about what others will do in one-shot games, evidence suggests that people often use evidential reasoning (ER), i.e., they assign diagnostic significance to their own actions in forming beliefs about the actions of other like-minded players. This is best viewed as a heuristic or bias relative to the standard approach. We provide a formal theoretical framework that incorporates ER into static games by proposing evidential games and the relevant solution concept: evidential equilibrium (EE). We derive the relation between a Nash equilibrium and an EE. We illustrate these concepts in the context of the prisoners’ dilemma game.

History

Citation

Games, 2015, 6(4), 637-676

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/Department of Economics

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Games

Publisher

MDPI

issn

2073-4336

eissn

2073-4336

Acceptance date

2015-11-05

Available date

2016-01-05

Publisher version

http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4336/6/4/637

Notes

JEL classifications: D03 (behavioural microeconomics: underlying principles); C7 (game theory and bargaining theory)

Language

en

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