Risk attitudes and the stag-hunt game
From MaRDI portal
Publication:485688
DOI10.1016/J.ECONLET.2014.06.019zbMATH Open1302.91048OpenAlexW2089141982MaRDI QIDQ485688FDOQ485688
Authors: Mürüvvet Büyükboyacı
Publication date: 14 January 2015
Published in: Economics Letters (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.econlet.2014.06.019
Recommendations
- Assessing others' risk-taking behavior from their affective states: experimental evidence using a stag hunt game
- On the evolution of attitudes towards risk in winner-take-all games
- Optimization incentive and relative riskiness in experimental stag-hunt games
- Risk attitude under random utility
- On relative and partial risk attitudes: theory and implications
- On the irrelevance of risk attitudes in repeated two-outcome games
- Risk attitudes and risk dominance in the long run
- Choices in the 11-20 game: the role of risk aversion
- Attitudes Towards Risk: An Experiment
- Risk Attitudes and Decision Weights
Cites Work
Cited In (9)
- The determinants of efficient behavior in coordination games
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- Loss avoidance as selection principle: evidence from simple stag-hunt games
- On the evolution of attitudes towards risk in winner-take-all games
- Collaboration and gender focality in stag hunt bargaining
- Stag hunt with unknown outside options
- Assessing others' risk-taking behavior from their affective states: experimental evidence using a stag hunt game
- No Guts, No Glory: An Experiment on Excessive Risk-Taking
- Evolutionary game dynamics
Uses Software
This page was built for publication: Risk attitudes and the stag-hunt game
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q485688)