Eliciting information from multiple experts
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Recommendations
- Eliciting information from a committee
- The art of conversation: eliciting information from experts through multi-stage communication
- Cheap talk with multiple experts and uncertain biases
- A model of expertise
- Advice from Multiple Experts: A Comparison of Simultaneous, Sequential, and Hierarchical Communication
Cites work
- A model of expertise
- Contracting with Imperfect Commitment and the Revelation Principle: The Single Agent Case
- Correlation without mediation: Expanding the set of equilibrium outcomes by ``cheap pre-play procedures
- Fair Distribution Protocols or How the Players Replace Fortune
- Interested experts and policy advice: Multiple referrals under open rule
- Multiple Referrals and Multidimensional Cheap Talk
- Strategic Information Transmission
- Universal Mechanisms
Cited in
(30)- Are Many Heads Better Than One—On Combining Information from Multiple Internet Sources
- Aggregation of expert opinions
- Aggregating experts' opinions to select the winner of a competition
- Competitive cheap talk
- Strategic information transmission networks
- Almost fully revealing cheap talk with imperfectly informed senders
- Eliciting information from a committee
- Voting in small committees
- Voting to persuade
- The limited value of a second opinion: competition and exaggeration in experimental cheap talk games
- A model of reporting and controlling outbreaks by public health agencies
- The art of conversation: eliciting information from experts through multi-stage communication
- Full disclosure in competitive Bayesian persuasion
- When to ask for an update: timing in strategic communication
- Two-sided strategic information transmission
- Picking the winners
- An integrated data envelopment analysis and simulation method for group consensus ranking
- Independent versus collective expertise
- Consistency and communication in committees
- Subgroup deliberation and voting
- Should straw polls be banned?
- Eliciting socially optimal rankings from unfair jurors
- Advice from Multiple Experts: A Comparison of Simultaneous, Sequential, and Hierarchical Communication
- The organization of expertise in the presence of communication
- Designing communication hierarchies
- Evaluation and strategic manipulation
- Expert panels with selective investigation
- Consulting an expert with potentially conflicting preferences
- Communication in financial markets with several informed traders
- Rational exaggeration and counter-exaggeration in information aggregation games
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