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 E&S Home > Vol. 11, No. 2 (2006) > Abstract Open Access Publishing 


Learning, Signaling, and Social Preferences in Public-Good Games

Marco A Janssen, Arizona State University
T. K. Ahn, Florida State University and Korea University


Abstract
This study compares the empirical performance of a variety of learning models and theories of social preferences in the context of experimental games involving the provision of public goods. Parameters are estimated via maximum likelihood estimation. We also performed estimations to identify different types of agents and distributions of parameters. The estimated models suggest that the players of such games take into account the learning of others and are belief learners. Despite these interesting findings, we conclude that a powerful method of model selection of agent-based models on dynamic social dilemma experiments is still lacking.
Key words
laboratory experiments; public goods; agent-based model; learning; social preferences

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Ecology and Society. ISSN: 1708-3087