Publication | Closed Access
Distinguishing Informational Cascades from Herd Behavior in the Laboratory
369
Citations
28
References
2004
Year
EngineeringBehavioral Decision MakingSocial InfluenceCollective BehaviorSocial SciencesPsychologyExperimental Decision MakingExperimental TestExperimental EconomicsImitative LearningSocial Learning TheoryBehavioral PrincipleDecision TheoryStatisticsBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceHerd BehaviorExperimental PsychologySocial CognitionDiscrete ActionAnimal BehaviourSocial BehaviorAnimal Behavior
This paper reports an experimental test of how individuals learn from the behavior of others. By using techniques only available in the laboratory, we elicit subjects' beliefs. This allows us to distinguish informational cascades from herd behavior. By adding a setup with continuous signal and discrete action, we enrich the ball-andurn observational learning experiments paradigm of Lisa R. Anderson and Charles Holt (1997). We attempt to understand subjects' behavior by estimating a model that allows for the possibility of errors in earlier decisions.
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