Persuasion and learning by countersignaling

C-Tier
Journal: Economics Letters
Year: 2013
Volume: 121
Issue: 3
Pages: 487-491

Authors (2)

Chung, Kim-Sau Eső, Péter (not in RePEc)

Score contribution per author:

0.505 = (α=2.02 / 2 authors) × 0.5x C-tier

α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count

Abstract

We model countersignaling (i.e., very high types refraining from signaling) arising from the tradeoff between persuasion and learning in a signaling game. We assume that the agent has imperfect private information regarding his/her productivity, which the signaling action provides additional verifiable information about. A higher-type agent benefits more from providing such objective, albeit imprecise, “proof” for the market, but may also gain less from learning about his/her productivity. When the latter effect dominates the former for the very high types, the equilibrium exhibits countersignaling: very high and low types pool on refraining from signaling, and only the medium types signal. Under certain conditions, the countersignaling equilibrium is the unique pure-strategy perfect sequential equilibrium.

Technical Details

RePEc Handle
repec:eee:ecolet:v:121:y:2013:i:3:p:487-491
Journal Field
General
Author Count
2
Added to Database
2026-01-25