Pages that link to "Item:Q1927511"
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The following pages link to What makes cheap talk effective? Experimental evidence (Q1927511):
Displaying 20 items.
- Communication and efficiency in competitive coordination games (Q380845) (← links)
- How cheap talk enhances efficiency in threshold public goods games (Q523024) (← links)
- Do actions speak louder than words? An experimental comparison of observation and cheap talk (Q700124) (← links)
- Words versus actions as a means to influence cooperation in social dilemma situations (Q763356) (← links)
- Capacity precommitment, communication, and collusive pricing: theoretical benchmark and experimental evidence (Q776854) (← links)
- Testing for effects of cheap talk in a public goods game with private information (Q1192628) (← links)
- A survey of experiments on communication via cheap talk (Q1382001) (← links)
- Self-serving cheap talk: a test of Aumann's conjecture (Q1592721) (← links)
- Restricted and free-form cheap-talk and the scope for efficient coordination (Q1753291) (← links)
- What makes cheap talk effective? Experimental evidence (Q1927511) (← links)
- ``I'm just a soul whose intentions are good'': the role of communication in noisy repeated games (Q2013382) (← links)
- Costly and discrete communication: an experimental investigation (Q2015045) (← links)
- What to tell? Wise communication and wise crowd (Q2021556) (← links)
- Experimental cheap talk games: strategic complementarity and coordination (Q2046169) (← links)
- Intention or request: the impact of message structures (Q2052492) (← links)
- Language and coordination games (Q2059053) (← links)
- Speech is silver, silence is golden (Q2351243) (← links)
- The power and limits of sequential communication in coordination games (Q2415990) (← links)
- Demanding or deferring? An experimental analysis of the economic value of communication with attitude (Q2416657) (← links)
- Meaning and credibility in experimental cheap-talk games (Q4625074) (← links)