《HANDBOOK OF EXPERIMENTAL ECONOMICS RESULTS》PDF下载

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PART 1: MARKETS Markets 1

1.1. Institutional Environments 3

1.2. Imperfect Competition 8

1.3. Dynamics of Market Adjustments 11

References 13

PART 1.1: INSTITUTIONAL ENVIRONMENTS 14

PART 1.1.1: PROPERTIES OF THE DOUBLE AUCTION 15

Chapter 1 Properties of Disequilibrium Adjustment in Double Auction Markets&CHARLES R. PLOTT 16

References 20

Chapter 2 From Market Jaws to the Newton Method: The Geometry of How a Market Can Solve Systems of Equations&PETER BOSSAERTS AND CHARLES R. PLOTT 22

References 24

Chapter 3 Exogenous Uncertainty Increases the Bid-Ask Spread in the Continuous Double Auction&VERNON L. SMITH AND MARK VAN BOENING 25

1. Experimental Design 25

2. Exogenous Uncertainty and the Bid/Ask Spread 27

3. Conclusion 30

References 30

Chapter 4 Zero-Intelligence Robots and the Double Auction Market: A Graphical Tour&PAUL J. BREWER 31

1. Environment 32

1.1. Values and Costs 32

1.2. Profits 32

1.3. Limitations on Trading 32

1.4. Market Rules 32

1.5. Budget Constraints 33

1.6. Trades Involve Arbitrage: No Speculative Trades 33

2. Robot Agents 34

2.1. Zero Intelligence Robots-Trading Algorithm 34

2.2. UNIT Robots-Trading Algorithm 34

2.3. Kaplan's Parasitic Robots' - Trading Algorithm 35

3. Literature - Robots and the Double Auction 35

3.1. Types of Questions 35

3.2. Major Results from the Literature - A Chronology 37

References 44

Chapter 5 Effect of Non-binding Price Controls in Double Auction Trading&VERNON L. SMITH AND ARLINGTON W. WILLIAMS 46

1. Introduction 46

2. Experimental Design 46

3. Experimental Results 48

4. Why Do Non-binding Price Controls Interfere with the DA Market Process? 53

5. Conclusions 53

References 53

PART 1.1.2: PROPERTIES OF POSTED OFFER PROCESSES 54

Chapter 6 Fairness and Short Run Price Adjustment in Posted Offer Markets&PRAVEEN KUJAL AND VERNON L. SMITH 55

1. Introduction 55

2. Market Experiments 55

2.1. Extension: Posted Bid vs Posted Offer 56

2.2. Our Experiments 57

3. Hypothesis and Experimental Results 57

4. Discussion 58

4.1. What is Fairness? 60

References 61

Chapter 7 Mixed Strategy Nash Equilibrium Predictions as a Means of Organizing Behavior in Posted-Offer Market Experiments&DOUGLAS D. DAVIS AND BART J. WILSON 62

1. Introduction 62

2. Equilibrium Mixed Strategy Pricing Distributions 63

3. Pricing Performance with Market Power 64

4. Pricing Densities Relative to Static Nash Equilibrium Predictions 67

5. Performance of Alternative Theories 68

6. Summary 69

References 69

Chapter 8 Simulated and Real Buyers in Posted Offer Markets&JAMIE BROWN KRUSE 71

1. Introduction 71

2. Summary of the Experimental Design 71

3. Results 72

Acknowledgements 76

References 76

Chapter 9 The Performance of Double-Auction and Posted-Offer Markets with Advance Production&STUART MESTELMAN 77

References 82

PART 1.1.3: CALL MARKETS AND SEALED BIDS 83

Chapter 10 Strategy-Proof Equilibrium Behavior in Two-Sided Auctions&VERNON L. SMITH 84

1. Strategy-Proof Equilibria in the Sealed Bid-Offer Auction 85

2. Strategy-Proof Equilibria in the Uniform Price Double Auction (UPDA) 88

3. Summary 89

References 91

Chapter 11 First Price Independent Private Values Auctions&JAMES C. COX 92

1. Tests of the RNM with Market Prices 92

2. Tests of the RNM with Subject Payoff Data 94

3. Tests of the CRRAM and the RNM with Individual Bid Data 95

4. Tests of the LCM with Individual Bid Data 96

5. Summary of the Test Results 98

Acknowledgement 98

References 98

PART 1.1.4: ALTERNATIVE MARKET INSTITUTIONS 99

Chapter 12 The Walrasian Auction&CORINNE BRONFMAN, KEVIN MCCABE, DAVID PORTER, STEPHEN RASSENTI AND VERNON SMITH 100

1. Introduction 100

2. Experimental Environments 100

2.1. Baseline 100

2.2. Multi-unit Non-stationary Supply and Demand Environment 101

3. Walrasian Auction Design and Computerized Implementation 102

4. Experimental Results 104

4.1. The El Environment Replication 104

4.2. Baseline and Treatment Effects 104

4.3. Individual Behavior 105

References 108

Chapter 13 The Matching Market Institution&DANIEL FRIEDMAN AND CHANGHUA RICH 109

1. Experimental Procedures 109

2. Results 111

3. Discussion114 References 114

Chapter 14 Tatonnement&CHARLES R. PLOTT 115

Reference 117

PART 1.2: IMPERFECT COMPETITION 118

PART 1.2.1: MARKET POWER 119

Chapter 15 Wage Differentials in Experimental Efficiency Wage Markets&ERNST FEHR AND SIMON GACHTER 120

1. Wage Differentials: Experiments Help to Test Explanations 120

2. The Fair Wage-Effort Version of Efficiency Wage Theory 121

2.1. Experimental Design 121

2.2. Results 121

3. The Shirking Version of Efficiency Wage Theory 123

3.1. Design 123

3.2. Results 124

4. Summary 125

References 126

Chapter 16 The Paradox of Power&YVONNE DURHAM, JACK HIRSHLEIFER AND VERNON L. SMITH 127

1. The Model 128

2. Implementing the Model 132

3. Experimental Procedures and Design 132

4. Results 133

4.1. Nash vs Cooperative Comparisons 133

4.2. Predictions of the Model 135

4.3. Charting the Observations 136

References 136

Chapter 17 The Exercise of Market Power in Laboratory Experiments&DOUGLAS D. DAVIS AND CHARLES A. HOLT 138

1. Introduction 138

2. Market Power 139

3. Applications of Market Power 143

References 145

Chapter 18 The Classical Experiments on Cournot Oligopoly&ANTONI BOSCH-DOMENECH AND NICOLAAS J. VRIEND 146

1. Sauermann and Selten's Results 146

2. Hoggatt's Results 148

3. Fouraker and Siegel's Results 149

References 152

Chapter 19 Experiments in Decentralized Monopoly Restraint&JAMES C. COX AND R. MARK ISAAC 153

1. Market Institutions for Monopoly Restraint 153

2. Contestable Markets 155

3. The Loeb—Magat Mechanism 156

4. The Finsinger-Vogelsang Mechanism 157

5. The Cox—Isaac Mechanism 159

Acknowledgement 161

References 161

PART 1.2.2: COLLUSION 163

Chapter 20 Price Signaling and "Cheap Talk" in Laboratory Posted Offer Markets&TIMOTHY N. CASON 164

1. Multi-Market versus Single-Market Competition 165

2. The Importance of the Signaling Language 167

3. Summary 168

References 168

Chapter 21 The Effects of Collusion in Laboratory Experiments&DOUGLAS D. DAVIS AND CHARLES A. HOLT 170

1. Introduction 170

2. Collusion with and without Secret Discounts 171

3. Recent Work 175

References 176

Chapter 22 Predatory Pricing: Rare Like a Unicorn?&ROSARIO GOMEZ, JACOB K. GOEREE AND CHARLES A. HOLT 178

1. Introduction 178

2. Single Market Designs 178

3. Multiple Market Designs 180

4. Summary 183

References 184

Chapter 23 Some Results on Anti-Competitive Behavior in Multi-Unit Ascending Price Auctions&KATERINA SHERSTYUK 185

1. Experiments on Demand Reduction 186

2. Experiments on Bidder Collusion 192

Acknowledgement 197

References 197

PART 1.2.3: NON-CONVEXITIES 199

Chapter 24 Non-Convexities, Economies of Scale, Natural Monopoly and Monopolistic Competition&CHARLES R. PLOTT 200

References 205

Chapter 25 Avoidable Cost Structures and Competitive Market Institutions&MARK V. BOENING AND NATHANIEL T. WILCOX 206

1. A Simple Avoidable Cost Structure 206

2. Three Market Institutions 208

3. The Results 209

4. A Next Step: Cooperative Arrangements? 211

References 211

PART 1.3: DYNAMICS OF MARKET ADJUSTMENTS 213

Chapter 26 Principles of Market Adjustment and Stability&CHARLES R. PLOTT 214

1. Theory 214

1.1. Cobweb Dynamics 215

1.2. The Walrasian (Hicks. Samuelson) Dynamics 216

1.3. Marshallian Dynamics 216

2. Experiments 217

2.1. Instability does not Occur under Conditions Predicted by the Cobweb Model 217

2.2. Walrasian Dynamics and not Marshallian Dynamics Capture the Backward-Bending Case 219

2.3. The Marshallian Model and not the Walrasian Model Best Describes Market Behavior in the Case of a Marshallian Externality or a "Fad" 223

3. Summary 226

References 227

Chapter 27 Off-floor Trading, Market Disintegration and Price Volatility in Bid/Ask Markets&VERNON L. SMITH AND MARK VAN BOENING 228

1. The Problem 228

2. The Environment 228

3. Results 229

4. Discussion: Implications for, and Barriers to, Institutional Redesign 232

References 232

Chapter 28 Quantitative Restrictions in Experimental Posted-offer Markets&PRAVEEN KUJAL 234

1. Introduction 234

1.1. Quotas 234

2. Quota Experiments 235

3. Experimental Design 236

3.1. Market equilibrium 237

4. Experimental Results 238

5. Conclusion 240

References 241

Chapter 29 Price Bubbles in Large Financial Asset Markets&ARLINGTON W. WILLIAMS 242

References 246

Chapter 30 Price Bubbles&DAVID PORTER AND VERNON L. SMITH 247

1. Introduction 247

2. Empirical Results from Laboratory Asset Markets 247

References 255

Chapter 31 Experiments with Arbitrage Across Assets&ERIC O'N. FISHER 256

References 259

Chapter 32 Bubbles and Crashes in Experimental Asset Markets: Common Knowledge Failure?&CHARLES NOUSSAIR AND CHARLES PLOTT 260

References 263

Chapter 33 A Comparison of Market Institutions&TIMOTHY N. CASON AND DANIEL FRIEDMAN 264

1. Market Institutions 264

2. Market Environment 266

3. Related Work 266

4. Results 267

4.1. Market Efficiency 267

4.2. Transaction Prices 269

4.3. Transaction Volume 271

5. Discussion 271

References 271

Chapter 34 Coordination Success in Non-cooperative Large Group Market Entry Games&AMNON RAPOPORT AND DARRYL A. SEALE 273

1. The Market Entry Game 273

2. Results 274

2.1. Sundali, Rapoport, and Seale (1995) 274

2.2. Rapoport et al. (1998) 281

2.3. Rapoport, Seale, and Winter (1997) 282

3. Adaptive Learning 293

Acknowledgement 294

References 294

PART 2: MARKET ECONOMICS OF UNCERTAINTY AND INFORMATION Market Economics of Uncertainty and Information 299

Chapter 35 Learning to Forecast Rationally&HUGH KELLEY AND DANIEL FRIEDMAN 303

1. Introduction 303

2. The Tasks 303

2.1. Orange Juice Forecasting (OJ) 303

2.2. The Medical Diagnosis Task (MD) 305

3. Results 305

3.1. Rolling Regressions 305

3.2. OJ Learning Curves 306

3.3. MD Learning Curves 308

4. Discussion 308

References 310

Chapter 36 Laboratory Tests of Job Search Models&JAMES C. COX AND RONALD L. OAXACA 311

1. Basic Search Experiments 311

2. Precommitment/No Precommitment Experiments 313

3. Recall Experiments 316

4. Extensions of the Standard Search Model 318

Acknowledgements 318

References 318

Chapter 37 Reciprocity and Contract Enforcement&SIMON GACHTER AND ERNST FEHR 319

1. The Contract Enforcement Problem 319

2. Experimental Design and Results of Fehr and Gachter (1998a) 320

2.1. Design 320

2.2. Results 320

3. Contract Enforcement with an Imperfect Verification Technology 323

4. Summary 324

References 324

Chapter 38 Reciprocity in Experimental Markets&ERNST FEHR AND ARMIN FALK 325

1. Introduction 325

2. Experimental Design 326

2.1. Common Features of All Treatments 326

2.2. The One-sided Auction-treatment 327

2.3. The Double Auction-treatment 327

2.4. The Bilateral Bargaining-treatment 328

2.5. Standard Predictions 328

3. Results 328

4. Reciprocity Under Conditions of High Stakes 329

5. Related Experiments 330

Acknowledgement 333

References 334

Chapter 39 Information Cascade Experiments&LISA R. ANDERSON AND CHARLES A. HOLT 335

1. Cascades 335

2. Market Applications and Alternative Institutions 340

References 342

Further reading 343

Chapter 40 Markets and Information Aggregation Mechanisms&KAY-YUT CHEN AND CHARLES R. PLOTT 344

1. Are The Lessons From The Simple Cases Useful? 348

References 352

PART 3: GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM AND THE ECONOMICS OF MULTIPLE MARKET SYSTEMS General Equilibrium and Multiple Market Systems 355

Chapter 41 Comparative Advantage and International Trade&CHARLES R. PLOTT 358

Reference 363

Chapter 42 Asset Pricing&PETER BOSSAERTS 364

1. What the Theory Predicts 364

2. The Empirical Question 365

3. What the Field Data Teach Us 365

4. What the Experiments Teach Us 366

References 369

Chapter 43 Price Discovery and Allocation in Chains and Networks of Markets&CHARLES R. PLOTT AND JACKIE YEUNG 370

Reference 375

Chapter 44 Multiple Market Systems and the Classical Principles of Price Dynamics in General Equilibrium&CHARLES R. PLOTT 376

References 382

Further reading 383

PART 4: GAMES 385

Games 387

4.1. Accuracy of the Nash Model 387

4.2. Learning in Games 389

PART 4.1: ACCURACY OF THE NASH MODEL 390

Chapter 45 Experimental Beauty Contest Games: Levels of Reasoning and Convergence to Equilibrium&ROSEMARIE NAGEL 391

1. Introduction 391

2. Variations on the Beauty Contest Game 392

3. Bounded Rational Behavior 401

3.1. Iterated Best Reply Model 401

3.2. Learning 404

Appendix A: Instructions (from Duffy and Nagel, 1997) 407

A.1. General 407

A.2. The Rules 407

A.3. What is the Median 408

A.4. Payoffs 408

A.5. Explanation Sheet 408

Appendix B: 408

References 409

Chapter 46 Reciprocity in Ultimatum and Dictator Games: An Introduction&ELIZABETH HOFFMAN, KEVIN MCCABE AND VERNON SMITH 411

1. Motivation 411

2. Ultimatum and Dictator Games Described 412

3. Experimental Designs and Summary Results 412

4. Interpretations and Discussion 414

References 415

Chapter 47 Preferences and Property Rights in Ultimatum and Dictator Games&ELIZABETH HOFFMAN, KEVIN MCCABE AND VERNON SMITH 417

1. Property Rights Defined 417

2. Experimental Design 417

3. Ultimatum Results 419

4. Dictator Games and Results 420

5. Discussion 421

References 422

Chapter 48 Prompting Strategic Reasoning Increases Other-regarding Behavior&ELIZABETH HOFFMAN, KEVIN MCCABE AND VERNON SMITH 423

1. Introduction 423

1.1. Previous Results 423

1.2. The Current Experiment 425

2. Experimental Design and Subject Recruitment 425

3. Experimental Results 426

4. Discussion 426

References 428

Chapter 49 Social Distance and Reciprocity in Dictator Games&ELIZABETH HOFFMAN, KEVIN MCCABE AND VERNON SMITH 429

1. Defining Variations on Perceived Social Distance in Dictator Games 429

2. Experimental Design 429

2.1. Replicating Forsythe et al. (1994) 430

2.2. FHSS-V 431

2.3. Double Blind 2 (DB2) 433

2.4. Single Blind 1 (SB1) 433

2.5. Single Blind 2 (SB2) 433

3. Experimental Design and Research Hypothesis 434

4. Results 435

References 435

Chapter 50 Fairness in Ultimatum Bargaining&J. KEITH MURNIGHAN 436

1. Defining and Investigating the Impact of Fairness Concerns 437

2. "My Offer is Fair" 440

3. Fairness, Anger, and Spite 445

4. Ultimatum Bargaining by Children 449

5. Ultimatums Dividing Money and M&Ms 449

6. Conclusions 451

Acknowledgements 452

References 452

Further reading 453

Chapter 51 Coordination Failure in Market Statistic Games&JOHN VAN HUYCK AND RAYMOND BATTALIO 454

1. Introduction 454

2. Strategic Uncertainty and Coordination Failure 455

3. The Influence of Out-of-Equilibrium Payoffs 457

4. The Influence of Group Size, Grid Size, and Order Statistic 458

5. The Separatrix 459

Acknowledgements 461

References 461

Chapter 52 The Problem of Common Choice in Symmetric N-person Coordination Games&CARL M. RHODES AND RICK K. WILSON 463

1. The Problem 463

2. Experimental Design 464

3. Single Stage Results 466

4. Repeated Play Results 467

5. Conclusion 470

Acknowledgements 471

References 471

Chapter 53 Equilibrium Convergence in Normal Form Games&NICOLE BOUCHEZ AND DANIEL FRIEDMAN 472

1. Laboratory Procedures and Treatments 472

2. Results 475

3. Discussion 479

References 479

Chapter 54 Analyzing Choice with Revealed Preference: Is Altruism Rational?&JAMES ANDREONI AND JOHN H. MILLER 481

1. Introduction 481

2. The Choice Task 483

3. Checking GARP 483

4. Conclusion 486

References 487

Chapter 55 Testing Theories of Other-regarding Behavior: A Sequence of Four Laboratory Studies&GARY E. BOLTON, JORDI BRANDTS, ELENA KATOK, AXEL OCKENFELS AND RAMI ZWICK 488

1. Introduction 488

2. Bolton and Zwick (1995): Reputation Building versus Self-centered Fairness in an Ultimatum Game 489

3. Bolton, Katok and Zwick (1998): The Nature of Giving Behavior in Dictator Games 492

4. Selten and Ockenfels (1998) and Ockenfels and Weimann (1999): The Fixed Total Sacrifice Effect in the Solidarity Game 494

5. Bolton, Brandts, and Ockenfels (1998): Distribution versus Intentions in a 2-person Dilemma Game 495

6. Summary: Regularities for Theory Building 498

References 498

Further reading 499

Chapter 56 Focal Points and Bargaining&KEN BINMORE AND JOSEPH SWIERZBINSKI 500

References 507

PART 4.2: ALTERNATIVES TO NASH 508

Chapter 57 Differences in the Economic Decisions of Men and Women: Experimental Evidence&CATHERINE C. ECKEL AND PHILIP J. GROSSMAN 509

Abstract 509

1. Public Goods Experiments 510

2. Ultimatum Experiments 513

3. Dictator Experiments 515

4. Conclusions 518

References 518

Chapter 58 Emergent Conventions in Evolutionary Games&JOHN VAN HUYCK 520

1. Introduction 520

2. Inefficient Conventions 521

3. Coordination Conventions: Labels and Populations 522

4. Unequal Division Bargaining Conventions 527

Acknowledgements 529

References 529

Further reading 530

Chapter 59 Self-centered Fairness in Games with More Than Two Players&GARY E. BOLTON AND AXEL OCKENFELS 531

1. Introduction 531

2. Sketch of ERC Preferences 532

3. Evidence in Games with More Than Two Players 534

3.1. The Guth-van Damme Bargaining Game 534

3.2. Market Game 537

3.3. The Fixed Total Sacrifice Effect 538

4. Summary 539

References 540

Chapter 60 Quantal Response Equilibria: A Brief Synopsis&RICHARD D. MCKELVEY AND THOMAS R. PALFREY 541

1. Introduction 541

2. The Model 541

3. Properties of the QRE 542

4. Fit to Experimental Data 543

4.1. Learning to Play Nash Over Time 543

4.2. Systematic Bias Away from the Nash Equilibrium 543

4.3. Nash Equilibrium Selection 544

Acknowledgement 547

References 548

Chapter 61 Logit Equilibrium Models of Anomalous Behavior: What to do when the Nash Equilibrium Says One Thing and the Data Say Something Else&SIMON P. ANDERSON, JACOB K. GOEREE AND CHARLES A. HOLT 549

1. Background: The Logit Approach 551

2. How to Find a Logit Equilibrium 552

3. Comparative Static Properties 554

Acknowledgement 557

References 557

PART 4.3: LEARNING IN GAMES 559

Chapter 62 Asymmetric Two-person Bargaining Under Incomplete Information: Strategic Play and Adaptive Learning&AMNON RAPOPORT, TERRY E. DANIEL AND DARRYL A. SEALE 560

1. Most Participants Behave Strategically in General Accordance with the Linear Equilibrium Strategy 561

2. There is an Information Advantage Exceeding the Predictions of the LES 563

3. Repeated Play with a Fixed Partner Enhances Strategic Advantages 565

4. Explanation of the Findings in Terms of Adaptive Learning 565

References 571

Chapter 63 The Effect of Message Space Size on Learning and Outcomes in Sender-Receiver Games&ANDREAS BLUME, DOUGLAS V. DEJONG AND GEOFFREY B. SPRINKLE 572

1. Introduction 572

2. The Games 572

3. Results 574

3.1. Game 1 574

3.2. Game 2 575

4. Summary 584

References 584

Chapter 64 Learning in Entry Limit Pricing Games&DAVID J. COOPER 585

1. Introduction 585

2. The Limit-pricing Game 585

3. Experimental Procedures 588

4. Adaptive Learning 588

5. Experimental Results 592

6. Conclusions 592

References 597

Chapter 65 Payoff Uncertainty and Cooperation in Finitely-repeated Prisoner's Dilemma Games&LAWRENCE M. KAHN AND J. KEITH MURNIGHAN 598

1. Methods 599

2. The Experimental Design 599

3. Results 602

4. Discussion and Conclusions 604

Acknowledgements 605

References 605

Chapter 66 Learning and Equilibrium in Games&COLIN F. CAMERER, TECK H. HO AND JUIN-KUAN CHONG 607

1. Introduction 607

2. Adaptive EWA and Other Learning Models 607

3. Sophisticated EWA and Equilibrium Models 611

References 615

PART 5: MECHANISM DESIGN AND POLICY APPLICATIONS 617

Mechanism Design and Policy Applications 619

5.1. Abstract, Theory Driven 619

5.2. Applied, Problem Driven 620

5.3. From the Lab to the Field 622

References 623

PART 5.1: ABSTRACT, THEORY DRIVEN 624

Chapter 67 Incentive-compatible Mechanisms for Pure Public Goods: A Survey of Experimental Research&YAN CHEN 625

1. Introduction 625

1.1. Theoretical Results and Unresolved Issues 625

1.2. Economic Environments in Experiments 627

2. Dominant Strategy Mechanisms 628

3. Nash-efficient Mechanisms 630

4. Mechanisms Using Refinements of Nash as Implementation Concepts 635

4.1. Perfect Nash Mechanisms 635

4.2. Subgame Perfect Mechanisms 637

5. Other Mechanisms 638

6. Concluding Remarks 639

Acknowledgements 640

References 640

Chapter 68 The Combinatorial Auction&STEPHEN J. RASSENTI AND VERNON L. SMITH 644

1. The Environment 645

1.1. Two Market Mechanisms: The Independent Auction and the Combinatorial Auction 646

2. The After Market 649

3. Results 649

References 653

PART 5.2: APPLIED, PROBLEM DRIVEN 654

Chapter 69 Share Trading and Coupon Banking Interact to Improve Performance in Emission Trading Markets&STUART MESTELMAN AND R. ANDREW MULLER 655

References 659

Chapter 70 Trading Institutions and Emission Allowances&TIMOTHY N. CASON 661

1. The Federal Sulfur Dioxide Allowance Program and the EPA Emissions Trading Auction 661

2. Other Emission Allowance Trading Assessments: China, Ontario and Los Angeles 665

3. Summary 667

References 667

Chapter 71 Procurement Contracting&JAMES C. COX AND R. MARK ISAAC 669

1. A Model of Cost Information Asymmetry 669

2. Linear Contracts 670

3. Testable Hypotheses 670

4. Experimental Results 671

Acknowledgements 674

References 675

Chapter 72 Electric Power Market Design Issues and Laboratory Experiments&STEPHEN RASSENTI AND VERNON SMITH 676

1. Nodal Price Theory for Lossy Lines 677

Acknowledgements 679

References 679

Chapter 73 Energy, Reserve and Adjustment Market Behavior With Industry Network, Demand and Generator Parameters&MARK A. OLSON, STEPHEN RASSENTI AND VERNON L. SMITH 681

1. Modeling Generators 681

2. Modeling Demand 685

3. Market Design 687

4. Sealed Bid Day-Ahead Energy Market 687

5. Reserve Market 688

6. Load Adjustment Market 689

7. Continuous Double Auction Energy Market 690

8. The Network 690

9. Optimization 691

10.Subjects 691

11.Data Analysis: Questions and Answers 692

11.1.What is the Competitive Efficiency of the Two Markets Based on Marginal Energy Costs? 692

11.2.Do SBO Prices and CDA Weighted Average Prices Converge to Comparable Levels? 694

11.3.What are the Profitability Levels for the Various Agents in the System? 694

11.4.Do Nodal Prices Reflect Distance Sensitivity and Line Constraints? 694

Reference 699

Chapter 74 Transmission Constraints, Incentive Auction Rules and Trader Experience in an Electric Power Market&STEVEN BACKERMAN, STEPHEN RASSENTI AND VERNON L. SMITH 700

1. Experimental Network Environment 700

2. Experimental Design 703

3. The Mechanism: A Continuously Updated Nodal Uniform Price Auction 703

4. Hypotheses and Tests 705

5. Regression Results 707

6. Further Results 707

7. Conclusions 708

References 709

Chapter 75 A Smart Market for the Spot Pricing and Pricing of Transmission Through a Power Grid&HUNG-PO CHAO AND CHARLES R. PLOTT 710

1. Kirchoff's Law and Resource Constraints 710

2. The Mechanism 711

2.1. Notation 712

2.2. Notation 713

2.3. Dual Linear Program for Continuous-time Double Auction 713

3. Parameter and the Testbed 714

4. Performance 715

Reference 718

Further reading 718

PART 5.3: FROM THE LAB TO THE FIELD 719

Chapter 76 Asset Market Manipulation: A Field Experiment with Racetrack Betting&COLIN F. CAMERER 720

1. Experimental Design 720

2. Experimental Results 722

3. Conclusion 723

References 724

Chapter 77 Pre-testing International Climate Change Policies: Methods and Results&PETER BOHM 725

1. Testing Gains from Emissions Quota Trade among a Few Countries (Bohm, 1997) 726

1.1. Test Design 726

1.2. Test Results 727

2.Testing International Acceptability of a 'Global' Tradable-quota Treaty with Diplomats as Subjects (Bohm,1997b) 730

References 732

Chapter 78 Quasi-experimental Evaluation of Regional Employment Subsidies&PETER BOHM 733

1. Experimental Design 733

2. Results 734

Further reading 735

Chapter 79 Field-test Elicitations of Demand for Public Goods&PETER BOHM 736

References 740

Chapter 80 Results from a Dozen Years of Election Futures Markets Research&JOYCE BERG, ROBERT FORSYTHE, FORREST NELSON AND THOMAS RIETZ 742

1. Introduction and Description of Election Futures Markets 742

2. Market Mechanism 743

3. Results from Share Markets 744

3.1. Absolute Market Accuracy 744

3.2. Accuracy Relative to Polls 746

4. How and why do Election Futures Markets "Work?" 748

5. Other Issues Studied and Future Research Potential 749

Acknowledgements 750

References 751

Chapter 81 Experimental Evidence on the Existence of Hypothetical Bias in Value Elicitation Methods&GLENN W. HARRISON AND E. ELISABET RUTSTROM 752

1. The CVM Literature and Tests with Private Goods 753

2. The CVM Literature and Tests with Public Goods 755

3. Open-ended Elicitation in the Lab 758

4. Dichotomous Choice Elicitation in the Lab 760

5. Social Elicitation in the Lab 761

6. Constructive Solutions 762

6.1. Instrument Calibration 762

6.2. Statistical Calibration 763

7. Conclusions 765

References 766

PART 6: NON-MARKET AND ORGANIZATIONAL RESEARCH 769

Non-market and Organizational Research 771

Introduction 771

6.1. Public Goods and Externalities 771

6.2. Committees and Voting Groups 773

Reference 774

PART 6.1: PUBLIC GOODS, EXTERNALITIES AND COMMON POOLS 775

Chapter 82 Partners versus Strangers: Random Rematching in Public Goods Experiments&JAMES ANDREONI AND RACHEL CROSON 776

1. Introduction 776

2. Partners versus Strangers 777

3. A Closer Look 777

4. Partners, Strangers, Warm-glow and Confusion 781

5. What is Next? 781

References 782

Chapter 83 Differentiating Altruism and Reciprocity&RACHEL T.A. CROSON 784

1. Introduction 784

2. Hypotheses 785

3. The Experiments and Results 785

4. Types of Reciprocity 788

5. Discussion and Conclusion 789

References 791

Chapter 84 Voluntary Provision of Public Goods: Experimental Results with Interior Nash Equilibria&SUSAN K. LAURY AND CHARLES A. HOLT 792

1. Introduction 792

2. Dominant Strategy Designs 793

3. Non-dominant Strategy Designs 795

4. Treatment Effects 799

5. Final Observations 800

Acknowledgements 800

References 800

Chapter 85 Spiteful Behavior in Voluntary Contribution Mechanism Experiments&TATSUYOSHI SAIJO 802

1. Saijo-Nakamura Experiments 803

2. Non-excludable Public Good Experiments 810

Acknowledgement 816

References 816

Chapter 86 Explaining the Comparative Statics in Step-Level Public Good Games&ARTHUR SCHRAM, THEO OFFERMAN AND JOEP SONNEMANS 817

1. Introduction 817

2. Basic Experimental Tools 818

3. Treatments 818

4. Interpreting the Results 821

References 824

Chapter 87 Cooperation in VCM Experiments: Results Using the Contribution Function Approach&JORDI BRANDTS AND ARTHUR SCHRAM 825

1. Introduction 825

2. Description of the Design 825

3. Results 826

4. Some Insights 829

References 829

Chapter 88 Voluntary Provision of Public Goods&KENNETH S. CHAN, STUART MESTELMAN AND R. ANDREW MULLER 831

References 835

Chapter 89 Intrinsic Motivation in a Public Good Environment&FRANS VAN WINDEN, FRANS VAN DIJK AND JOEP SONNEMANS 836

1. Introduction 836

2. Experimental Design 837

3. Main Observations 841

3.1. Different Intrinsic Motivation for Contributing 841

3.2. Intrinsic Motivation Changes with Social Interaction 841

3.3. Effect of Success of Social Interaction (Social Ties) 841

3.4. Group Formation 844

4. Conclusions 844

References 844

Chapter 90 Theoretical Explanations of Treatment Effects in Voluntary Contributions Experiments&CHARLES A. HOLT AND SUSAN K. LAURY 846

1. Introduction 846

2. Generalized Preferences 848

3. Noisy Decision Making 850

4. Evolution and Adaptation 851

4.1. Cooperation and Signaling 852

5. Final Observations 854

Acknowledgement 854

References 854

PART 6.2: COMMITTEES AND VOTING GROUPS 856

Chapter 91 Institutional Modifications of Majority Rule&WILLIAM P. BOTTOM, RONALD A. KING, LARRY HANDLIN AND GARY J. MILLER 857

1. General Introduction 857

2. Agenda Control 858

2.1. One-dimensional Agenda Control 858

2.2. Decentralized Agenda Control 861

3. Extraordinary Majorities and the Veto 864

4. Bicameralism 867

Acknowledgements 870

References 870

Chapter 92 Endogenous Properties of Equilibrium and Disequilibrium in Spatial Committee Games&RICK K. WILSON 872

1. Theoretical Background 872

2. Experimental Design 873

3. Endogenous Preferences 874

3.1. The Core 874

3.2. Star Preferences 875

3.3. Skew Star Preferences 877

4. Discussion 878

Acknowledgements 878

References 879

Chapter 93 Structure Induced Equilibrium in Spatial Committee Games&RICK K. WILSON 880

1. Theoretical Basics 880

2. Experimental Design 881

3. Monopoly Agenda Setting 882

4. Backward Voting Agenda 884

5. Conclusion 887

Acknowledgements 888

References 888

Chapter 94 Three-way Experimental Election Results: Strategic Voting, Coordinated Outcomes and Duverger's Law&THOMAS RIETZ 889

1. Introduction 889

2. The Experiments 891

2.1. Common Procedures 891

2.2. Equilibria 891

2.3. Specific Treatments 892

3. Results 893

3.1. Candidate Winning Frequencies 893

3.2. Other Results 895

4. Conclusions and Other Issues Studied with Similar Experiments 895

Acknowledgements 896

References 896

Chapter 95 Participation Game Experiments: Explaining Voter Turnout&JOEP SONNEMANS AND ARTHUR SCHRAM 898

References 901

PART 6.3: BEHAVIOR AND ORGANIZATIONS 902

Chapter 96 Growing Organizational Culture in the Laboratory&COLIN F. CAMERER AND ROBERTO WEBER 903

References 907

PART 7: INDIVIDUAL CHOICE, BELIEFS AND BEHAVIOR 911

Individual Choice, Beliefs and Behavior 911

Risk: Effect of Stakes and Sex 911

Endowment effects 912

References 913

Chapter 97 Motivation Theory and Experimental Behavior under the Decision Cost Hypothesis&VERNON L. SMITH AND JAMES M. WALKER 914

1. Payoffs and Behavior 914

1.1. Decision Making and Decision Cost Under Uncertainty 915

1.2. Two-person Interactive Model of Decision Cost 917

References 920

Chapter 98 Intertemporal Choice under Habit Formation&ERNST FEHR AND PETER K. ZYCH 923

1. Introduction 923

2. Experimental Design 923

3. Results 924

4. Conclusions 927

References 928

Chapter 99 Preference Reversal: Now You See it, Now You Do Not!&PETER BOHM 929

Concluding remarks 937

References 938

Chapter 100 The Endowment Effect: Evidence of Losses Valued More than Gains&DANIEL KAHNEMAN, JACK L. KNETSCH AND RICHARD H. THALER 939

1. Experimental Verification 940

2. Exchanges 941

3. Repeated Trials 943

4. Buy, Sell, and Choose 943

5. Market Transactions 946

6. Summary 946

References 947

Chapter 101 The Endowment Effect&PRAVEEN KUJAL AND VERNON L. SMITH 949

1. The Background 949

2. The Experiments 950

2.1. Kahneman-Knetsch-Thaler Choice Experiments 950

2.2. Franciosi et al. Choice Experiments 950

2.3. Kahneman, Knetsch and Thaler (1991) Exchange Experiments 952

2.4. Mug Exchange Experiments using Uniform Price Double Auction 953

References 955

Chapter 102 The Becker-DeGroot-Marschak Mechanism is not Generally Incentive-Compatible in Practice&PETER BOHM 956

1. Experimental design 956

2. Conclusions 957

References 957

Chapter 103 Utility Maximization&JAMES C. COX 958

1. The Utility Hypothesis 958

2. A Complete, Disaggregated Data Set 960

3. Test Results and Power 961

4. Are the Inconsistencies with Utility Maximization Significant? 963

Acknowledgement 965

References 965

Chapter 104 Preference Reversals&JAMES C. COX 967

1. Seminal Experiments 968

2. Independence Axiom Treatments 969

3. Incentive Treatment 971

4. Transitivity Treatments 972

5. Risk Neutrality Treatment 973

6. Market Treatment 974

Acknowledgement 975

References 975

Chapter 105 Rationality the Fast and Frugal Way: Introduction&GERD GIGERENZER AND PETER M. TODD 976

1. Heuristics 977

2. A Fast and Frugal Heuristic 977

3. The Adaptive Toolbox 979

3.1. Heuristic Principles for Guiding Search 979

3.2. Heuristic Principles for Stopping Search 980

3.3. Heuristic Principles for Decision Making 980

4. Emergency Room Decisions 981

5. Ecological Rationality 983

6. What is to Come 984

References 985

Chapter 106 The Recognition Heuristic and the Less-Is-More Effect&DANIEL G. GOLDSTEIN AND GERD GIGERENZER 987

1. Accuracy of the Recognition Heuristic 988

2. The Less-is-More Effect 988

3. Do People Use the Recognition Heuristic? 990

4. Does the Less-is-More Effect Occur in Human Reasoning? 991

5. The Underpinnings of the Recognition Heuristic 992

References 992

Chapter 107 The Recognition Heuristic: A Fast and Frugal Way to Investment Choice?&ANDREAS ORTMANN, GERD GIGERENZER, BERNHARD BORGES AND DANIEL G. GOLDSTEIN 993

1. Investment Theory and Practice 993

2. Recognition-based Investment Decisions 994

2.1.When Choosing a Subset from a Larger Set, Choose Those Objects in the Larger Set That are Highly Recognized 994

3.Study 1 994

3.1. Study Design 994

3.2. How Did High Recognition Portfolios Perform Relative to Low Recognition Portfolios? 997

3.3. How Did High Recognition Portfolios Perform Relative to Market Indices? 997

3.4. How Did High Recognition Perform Relative to Managed Funds? 998

3.5. How Did High Recognition Portfolios Perform Relative to Random Stock Picks? 999

3.6. How Did High Recognition Portfolios Perform Relative to Individuals' Investment Choices? 1000

4. From Recognition to Riches? 1000

5. Study 2 1000

5.1. Study Design 1001

5.2. How Did High Recognition Portfolios Perform Relative to Low Recognition Portfolios? 1001

5.3. How Did High Recognition Portfolios Perform Relative to Various Benchmarks? 1002

5.4. What About Gender Effects? 1002

5.5. From Recognition to Riches? 1002

6. Conclusion 1003

References 1003

Chapter 108 One-Reason Decision Making&GERD GIGERENZER, LAURA MARTIGNON, ULRICH HOFFRAGE,JORG RIESKAMP, JEAN CZERLINSKI AND DANIEL G. GOLDSTEIN 1004

1. "Take The Best" and Minimalist 1004

2. Simple Rules for Search 1006

3. Predicting Homelessness 1008

4. Fast and Frugal Heuristics Versus Linear Models: A Competition 1008

5. Fast and Frugal Heuristics Versus Bayesian Methods 1009

6. Why is Take The Best so Robust? 1010

7. Ecological Rationality: Which Environmental Structures Can Take The Best Exploit 1011

8. Non-compensatory Information 1011

9. Scarce Information 1012

10. Abundant Information 1013

11.Do People Intuitively Adapt Heuristics to Environmental Structures? 1013

12.Does the Use of Lexicographic Strategies Depend on Time Pressure? 1014

13.An Intelligent System Must Ignore Information 1015

References 1016

Chapter 109 Cognitive Illusions Reconsidered&GERD GIGERENZER, RALPH HERTWIG, ULRICH HOFFRAGE AND PETER SEDLMEIER 1018

1. Base Rate Fallacy Reconsidered 1018

2. The Ecological Argument 1019

3. Helping John Q. Public 1020

4. Helping Physicians 1021

5. Helping AIDS Counselors 1023

6. Helping Lawyers and Judges 1023

7. How to Teach Bayesian Reasoning 1024

8. Overconfidence Bias Reconsidered 1025

9. Conjunction Fallacy Reconsidered 1027

10.Availability Reconsidered 1030

11.Conclusion 1033

References 1033

Chapter 110 Social Heuristics&PETER M. TODD, JORG RIESKAMP AND GERD GIGERENZER 1035

1. Social Heuristics for Cooperation 1035

2. Detecting Cheaters 1037

3. Cheater Detection Versus Social Contracts 1040

4. Cheater Detection Versus Logical Reasoning 1041

5. Searching for Mates 1042

6. Conclusion 1045

References 1045

Chapter 111 Payoff Scale Effects and Risk Preference Under Real and Hypothetical Conditions&SUSAN K. LAURY AND CHARLES A. HOLT 1047

1. Introduction 1047

2. Incentive Effects for Choices Involving Gains 1048

3. Choices in the Loss Domain, and the Reflection Effect 1050

4. Conclusion 1052

References 1053

Chapter 112 Rewards and Behavior in First Price Auctions&VERNON L. SMITH AND JAMES M. WALKER 1054

1. The First Price Auction 1054

2. The Experimental Environment 1055

3. Behavior 1056

References 1060

Chapter 113 Men, Women and Risk Aversion: Experimental Evidence&CATHERINE C. ECKEL AND PHILIP J. GROSSMAN 1061

1. Abstract Gamble Experiments 1062

2. Contextual Environment Experiments 1066

3. Evidence From Field Studies 1069

4. Discussion 1071

References 1072

PART 8: METHODS 1077

8. Methods 1077

Chapter 114 Experimetrics: The Use of Market Experiments to Evaluate the Performance of Econometric Estimators&JAMES C. COX AND RONALD L. OAXACA 1078

1. Designing Experiments to Study the Properties of Estimators 1079

2. Performance of the Estimators 1080

3. Explanation of the Posted Offer Results 1083

Acknowledgement 1085

References 1086

Chapter 115 On the Performance of the Lottery Procedure for Controlling Risk Preferences&JOYCE E. BERG, THOMAS A. RIETZ AND JOHN W. DICKHAUT 1087

1. Introduction 1087

2. Inducing Risk Preferences in Theory 1087

3. Evidence 1090

3.1. Inducing Risk Neutrality: Evidence from Sealed Bid Auctions 1090

3.2. Inducing Risk Aversion and Risk Seeking: Evidence from Paired Choice Tasks 1092

3.3. Inducing Risk Aversion and Risk Seeking: Evidence from the Becker-DeGroot-Marshak Procedure 1093

4. Summary 1094

Acknowledgements 1096

References 1096