Abstract
How coordination can be achieved in isolated, one-shot interactions without communication and in the absence of focal points is a long-standing question in game theory. We show that a cost-benefit approach to reasoning in strategic settings delivers sharp theoretical predictions that address this central question. In particular, our model predicts that, for a large class of individual reasoning processes, coordination in some canonical games is more likely to arise when players perceive heterogeneity in their cognitive abilities, rather than homogeneity. In addition, and perhaps contrary to common perception, it is not necessarily the case that being of higher cognitive sophistication is beneficial to the agent: in some coordination games, the opposite is true. We show that subjects’ behavior in a laboratory experiment is consistent with the predictions of this model, and reject alternative coordination mechanisms. Overall, the empirical results strongly support our model.
Keywords
coordination; cognitive cost; sophistication; strategic reasoning; value of reasoning;
JEL codes
- C72: Noncooperative Games
- C91: Laboratory, Individual Behavior
- C92: Laboratory, Group Behavior
- D80: General
Reference
Larbi Alaoui, Katharina A. Janezic, and Antonio Penta, “Coordination and Sophistication”, TSE Working Paper, n. 22-1394, December 2022.
See also
Published in
TSE Working Paper, n. 22-1394, December 2022