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Journal of Economic Theory

ISSN: 0022-0531

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Datasets associated with articles published in Journal of Economic Theory

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1970
2025
1970 2025
4 results
  • Data for: Estimating Information Cost Functions in Models of Rational Inattention
    This data set contains subject responses for a series of perceptual tasks (dot counting and angle identification), as well as the R code used to analyze them. Please see the included README files for details.
    • Dataset
  • Codes for "Blast from the Past: The Altruism Model is Richer than you Think"
    MATLAB Source Code
    • Dataset
  • Imitation and the Evolution of Walrasian Behavior: Theoretically Fragile but Behaviorally [Dataset]
    A well-known result by Vega-Redondo (1997) [18] implies that in symmetric Cournot oligopolies, imitation leads to the Walrasian outcome. We show that this result is not robust to the slightest asymmetry in costs, since every outcome where agents choose identical actions will be played some fraction of the time in the long run. We then conduct experiments to check this fragility. We obtain that, contrary to the theoretical predictio n, the Walrasian outcome is a good predictor of market outcomes. Finally, we suggest a new theory based on a mix of imitation and other learning processes that explains subjects' behavior fairly well.
    • Dataset
  • Imitation - Theory and Experimental Evidence [Dataset]
    We introduce a generalized theoretical approach to study imitation and subject it to rigorous experimental testing. In our theoretical analysis we find that the different predictions of previous imitation models are mainly explained by different informational assumptions, and to a lesser extent by different behavioral rules. In a laboratory experiment we test the different theories by systematically varying information conditions. We find significant effects of seemingly innocent changes in information. Moreover, the generalized imitation model predicts the differences between treatments well. The data provide support for imitation on the individual level, both in terms of choice and in terms of perception. Furthermore, individuals’ propensity to imitate more successful actions is increasing in payoff differences.
    • Dataset