posted on 2023-01-06, 15:16authored byD Rojo Arjona, S Sitzia, J Zheng
We experimentally test whether increasing the salience of payoff-irrelevant focal points (Schelling, 1960) can counteract the negative impact of conflicts of interest on coordination. The intuition is that, in the presence of conflict, the solution to the coordination dilemma offered by the focal point loses importance. Increasing its salience increases its relevance and, therefore, coordination success. When we vary label salience between subjects, we find support for this conjecture in games with a constant degree of conflict, similar to battle of the sexes games, but not in games that feature outcomes with different degrees of payoff inequality and efficiency. In an additional experiment in which we vary label salience within subjects, choices are found not to be affected by our salience manipulation. Yet, the proportion of choices consistent with the focal point is significantly greater than that in the between-subject design.
Funding
Jiwei Zheng’s work on the project has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme, grant agreement No. 670103.
History
Citation
David Rojo Arjona, Stefania Sitzia, Jiwei Zheng, Overcoming coordination failure in games with focal points: An experimental investigation,
Games and Economic Behavior, Volume 136, 2022, Pages 505-523, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geb.2022.10.010.