Switching Away From Probability One Beliefs
This paper considers a class of repeated signalling games to gain some intuitive insights into the effects and the desirability of modelling players in a dynamic game of incomplete information as being obstinate in the sense that their beliefs satisfy a support restriction. We demonstrate that such a restriction is rather dubious on a-priori grounds and in general imposes "too much" pooling on sequential equilibrium outcomes. Equilibria violating a support restriction should therefore not be dismissed in dynamic models of incomplete information and may actually reflect the possibility of reputation effects present in such a setting.
Year of publication: |
1990-07
|
---|---|
Authors: | Nöldeke, Georg ; Damme, Eric van |
Institutions: | University of Bonn, Germany |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Equilibrium selection in the spence signalling game
Gueth, Werner, (1989)
-
On the Existence of Linear Equilibria in the Rochet-Vila Model of Market Making
Nöldeke, Georg, (2004)
-
Strategic Choice Handicaps when Females Pay the Cost of the Handicap
Nöldeke, Georg, (2001)
- More ...