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Marriott Marquis, Carlsbad
Hosted By:
Econometric Society
Bayesian Persuasion
Paper Session
Saturday, Jan. 4, 2020 10:15 AM - 12:15 PM (PDT)
- Chair: Fei Li, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill
Censorship as Optimal Persuasion
Abstract
A sender designs a signal about the state of the world to persuade a receiver. Under standard assumptions, an optimal signal censors states on one side of a cutoff and reveals all other states. This result holds in continuous and discrete environments with general and monotone partitional signals. The sender optimally censors more information if she is more biased, if she is more certain about the receiver’s preferences, and if the receiver is easier to persuade. We apply our results to the problem of media censorship by a government.Bayesian Persuasion with Costly Messages
Abstract
We study a model of Bayesian persuasion in which the Sender publicly designs a signal structure, privately observes the signal realization and then reports a message to the Receiver at a cost that depends on the signal realization. We provide sufficient conditions for full information revelation by the Sender, and these conditions are satisfied under many commonly studied communication games. Under these conditions, the Sender's (lack of) commitment in the persuasion problem is quantified as a communication cost to sustain the chosen belief distribution. The value of persuasion is shown to be the Sender's utility under his most preferred equilibrium within the set of equilibria with full information revelation in the given communication game. We apply this approach to study test design and a lobbyist's incentive to generate and truthfully report new information to policy-makers.Simultaneous Versus Sequential Disclosure
Abstract
We study an environment in which a decision maker has access to several expert advisers. The experts all have access to an identical set of facts. The decision maker's utility is increasing in the number of facts that the experts reveal. The experts have (potentially) different preferences. The game in which experts simultaneously disclose information typically has multiple equilibria. When multiple equilibria exist, the decision maker's favorite equilibrium fails to survive iterative deletion of weakly dominated strategies. We characterize the set of equilibria that survive iterative deletion of weakly dominated strategies. In a leading special case, only one outcome survives iterative deletion of weakly dominated strategies. It is the most preferred equilibrium from the perspective of the experts. We study the outcomes that can arise when the decision maker can consult the experts sequentially. We demonstrate that if the decision maker can select the order of consultations, can consult experts multiple times, and can commit to ending the consultation process, then in leading cases he can induce the same disclosure as with simultaneous disclosure. Sequential disclosure may perform worse than simultaneous disclosure from the perspective of the decision maker when it is not possible to consult experts multiple times or if commitment is not feasible.Sequential Persuasion
Abstract
This paper studies sequential Bayesian persuasion games with multiple senders. We provide a tractable characterization of equilibrium outcomes. We apply the model to study how the structure of consultations affects information revelation. Adding a sender who moves first cannot reduce informativeness in equilibrium, and results in a more informative equilibrium in the case of two states. Moreover, with the exception of the first sender, it is without loss of generality to let each sender move only once. Sequential persuasion cannot generate a more informative equilibrium than simultaneous persuasion and is always less informative when there are only two states. Finally, we provide a simple condition that guarantees that full revelation is the unique equilibrium outcome regardless of the ordering of senders.JEL Classifications
- D8 - Information, Knowledge, and Uncertainty
- C7 - Game Theory and Bargaining Theory