首页|Cognitive costs and misperceived incentives: Evidence from the BDM mechanism

Cognitive costs and misperceived incentives: Evidence from the BDM mechanism

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? 2022 The Author(s)For the widely-used Becker–DeGroot–Marschak (BDM) mechanism, we provide a Bayesian model of imperfect perception that formalizes the notion of misperceiving incentives and derive population-level comparative static predictions for agents that must pay a cognitive cost to improve their understanding of incentives. These predictions are not symmetric: reductions in mistakes are more robust for cost decreases than for benefit increases. Using data from an existing experiment and new experimental treatments, we find evidence in line with these predictions, suggesting that subject misperceptions respond to both the costs and benefits of better understanding the mechanism's incentives. Moreover, a treatment that reduces the costs of perception leads to larger improvements in understanding, and these improvements are equivalent to learning with feedback.

Contingent thinkingExperimentsImperfect perceptionRational inattention

Martin D.、Munoz-Rodriguez E.

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Kellogg School of Management Northwestern University

Center for Economic Studies El Colegio de Mexico A.C.

2022

European Economic Review

European Economic Review

ISSHP
ISSN:0014-2921
年,卷(期):2022.148
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