An experimental study of network effects on coordination in asymmetric games

Publication date

2019-12-01

Authors

Broere, J. J.ISNI 0000000493301098
Buskens, VincentORCID 0000-0002-4483-7238ISNI 0000000115699289
Stoof, H.T.C.ISNI 0000000116481361
Sánchez, Angel

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Abstract

Network structure has often proven to be important in understanding the decision behavior of individuals or agents in different interdependent situations. Computational studies predict that network structure has a crucial influence on behavior in iterated 2 by 2 asymmetric ‘battle of the sexes’ games. We test such behavioral predictions in an experiment with 240 human subjects. We found that as expected the less ‘random’ the network structure, the better the experimental results are predictable by the computational models. In particular, there is an effect of network clustering on the heterogeneity of convergence behavior in the network. We also found that degree centrality and having an even degree are important predictors of the decision behavior of the subjects in the experiment. We thus find empirical validation of predictions made by computational models in a computerized experiment with human subjects.

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Broere, J, Buskens, V, Stoof, H & Sánchez, A 2019, 'An experimental study of network effects on coordination in asymmetric games', Scientific Reports, vol. 9, no. 1, 6842 (2019) . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-43260-0