Abstract
We suggest an alternating proposals protocol with a confirmation stage as a way of solving a Prisoner’s Dilemma game. We interpret players’ proposals and (no) confirmation of outcomes of the game as a tacit communication device. The protocol leads to unprecedented high levels of cooperation in the laboratory. Assigning the power of confirmation to one of the two players alone, rather than alternating the role of a leader significantly increases the probability of cooperation in the first bargaining period. We interpret pre-agreement strategies as tacit messages on players’ willingness to cooperate and as signals pursuing individualistic objectives like publicizing one’s bargaining abilities or eliciting those of the opponent.
Keywords
Prisoner’s Dilemma; Bargaining; Confirmed proposals; Cooperative agreement; Tacit communication;
Reference
Giuseppe Marco Attanasi, Aurora Garcia-Gallego, Nikolaos Georgantzis, and Aldo Montesano, “An experiment on Prisoner’s Dilemma with confirmed proposals”, Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, vol. 120, n. 2, March 2013, pp. 216–227.
See also
Published in
Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, vol. 120, n. 2, March 2013, pp. 216–227