Does one Bayesian make a difference?
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Publication:472209
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Cites work
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1351867 (Why is no real title available?)
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 3443893 (Why is no real title available?)
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 3280855 (Why is no real title available?)
- A general framework for rational learning in social networks
- Agreeing to disagree
- Bayesian learning in social networks.
- Communication, consensus, and knowledge
- Consensus Over Ergodic Stationary Graph Processes
- Continuous Auctions and Insider Trading
- Convergence rate for consensus with delays
- Convergence speed in distributed consensus and averaging
- Inferring beliefs from actions
- Information aggregation in dynamic markets with strategic traders
- Informational externalities and emergence of consensus
- Pathological Outcomes of Observational Learning
- Persuasion Bias, Social Influence, and Unidimensional Opinions
- Reaching a Consensus
- Spread of (mis)information in social networks
- The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money
- We can't disagree forever
Cited in
(21)- Bayesian decision making in groups is hard
- Rational groupthink
- Consensus in social networks: revisited
- What do leaders know?
- Bayesian social learning with local interactions
- Cognitively-constrained learning from neighbors
- Learning from neighbours about a changing state
- A Reputation Game Simulation: Emergent Social Phenomena from Information Theory
- Homophily and influence
- The relative contributions of private information sharing and public information releases to information aggregation
- Bayesian evidence accumulation on social networks
- A model of belief influence in large social networks
- A theory of non-Bayesian social learning
- A mathematical framework for dynamical social interactions with dissimulation
- Opinion dynamics and wisdom under conformity
- The impact of interaction and social learning on aggregate expectations
- Strategic influence in social networks
- Bayesian learning in social networks.
- Misinformation due to asymmetric information sharing
- Multi-agent inference in social networks: a finite population learning approach
- Information diffusion in networks with the Bayesian peer influence heuristic
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