Pages that link to "Item:Q2437173"
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The following pages link to Cheap talk with multiple audiences: an experimental analysis (Q2437173):
Displaying 18 items.
- Competition, preference uncertainty, and jamming: a strategic communication experiment (Q263383) (← links)
- The role of verifiability and privacy in the strategic provision of performance feedback: theory and experimental evidence (Q516968) (← links)
- How to talk to multiple audiences (Q536082) (← links)
- Do actions speak louder than words? An experimental comparison of observation and cheap talk (Q700124) (← links)
- Testing for effects of cheap talk in a public goods game with private information (Q1192628) (← links)
- Using cheap talk to polarize or unify a group of decision makers (Q1729665) (← links)
- Communication is more than information sharing: the role of status-relevant knowledge (Q1735778) (← links)
- Communication with evidence in the lab (Q1756334) (← links)
- An experimental study of strategic information transmission (Q1904626) (← links)
- What makes cheap talk effective? Experimental evidence (Q1927511) (← links)
- Can there be a market for cheap-talk information? An experimental investigation (Q2173410) (← links)
- Cheap talk games with two-senders and different modes of communication (Q2221263) (← links)
- The limited value of a second opinion: competition and exaggeration in experimental cheap talk games (Q2273940) (← links)
- Ethnic conflicts with informed agents: a cheap talk game with multiple audiences (Q2327076) (← links)
- An experimental analysis of multidimensional cheap talk (Q2347773) (← links)
- Demanding or deferring? An experimental analysis of the economic value of communication with attitude (Q2416657) (← links)
- Delegation based on cheap talk (Q2689849) (← links)
- Lying for votes (Q6148360) (← links)