Publication | Closed Access
An Experimental Test of Advice and Social Learning
112
Citations
27
References
2010
Year
Standard Social-learning ExperimentBehavioral Decision MakingEducational PsychologyEducationSocial InfluenceLaboratory Social-learning SituationPsychologySocial SciencesExperimental Decision MakingSocial Learning EnvironmentExperimental TestExperimental EconomicsSocial ReasoningSocial Learning TheoryHuman LearningImitation LearningBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceSocial SkillsLearning SciencesExperimental PsychologyReal WorldSocial CognitionBehavioral EconomicsSocial BehaviorLearning TheoryBehavioral ExperimentsSocial LearningPersuasion
Social learning describes any situation in which individuals learn by observing the behavior of others. In the real world, however, individuals learn not just by observing the actions of others but also from seeking advice. This paper introduces advice giving into the standard social-learning experiment of Çelen and Kariv (Çelen, B., S. Kariv. 2005. An experimental test of observational learning under imperfect information. Econom. Theory 26(3) 677–699). The experiments are designed so that both pieces of information—action and advice—are equally informative (in fact, identical) in equilibrium. Despite the informational equivalence of advice and actions, we find that subjects in a laboratory social-learning situation appear to be more willing to follow the advice given to them by their predecessor than to copy their action, and that the presence of advice increases subjects' welfare.
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