TY - JOUR
T1 - Strategy-proofness in experimental matching markets
AU - Guillen, Pablo
AU - Veszteg, Róbert F.
N1 - Funding Information:
We gratefully acknowledge useful comments from Rustamdjan Hakimov, Bettina Klaus, Dmitriy Kvasov, Jordi Massó, Jörg Oechssler, and seminar participants at Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Université de Bordeaux and the SING15 conference at the University of Turku. Financial support from the Waseda Institute of Political Economy and Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research 17K03634 from MEXT and JSPS has made our experimental sessions possible. We have polished and improved the manuscript with the help of the constructive criticism received from two anonymous referees, the editor, Marie Claire Villeval, and Ak Akkawi, who helped us with language editing.
Funding Information:
We gratefully acknowledge useful comments from Rustamdjan Hakimov, Bettina Klaus, Dmitriy Kvasov, Jordi Massó, Jörg Oechssler, and seminar participants at Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Université de Bordeaux and the SING15 conference at the University of Turku. Financial support from the Waseda Institute of Political Economy and Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research 17K03634 from MEXT and JSPS has made our experimental sessions possible. We have polished and improved the manuscript with the help of the constructive criticism received from two anonymous referees, the editor, Marie Claire Villeval, and Ak Akkawi, who helped us with language editing.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020, Economic Science Association.
PY - 2021/6
Y1 - 2021/6
N2 - We introduce two novel matching mechanisms, Reverse Top Trading Cycles (RTTC) and Reverse Deferred Acceptance (RDA), with the purpose of challenging the idea that the theoretical property of strategy-proofness induces high rates of truth-telling in economic experiments. RTTC and RDA are identical to the celebrated Top Trading Cycles (TTC) and Deferred Acceptance (DA) mechanisms, respectively, in all their theoretical properties except that their dominant-strategy equilibrium is to report one’s preferences in the order opposite to the way they were induced. With the focal truth-telling strategy being out of equilibrium, we are able to perform a clear measurement of how much of the truth-telling reported for strategy-proof mechanisms is compatible with rational behaviour and how much of it is caused by confused decision-makers following a default, focal strategy without understanding the structure of the game. In a school-allocation setting, we find that roughly half of the observed truth-telling under TTC and DA is the result of naïve (non-strategic) behaviour. Only 14–31% of the participants choose actions in RTTC and RDA that are compatible with rational behaviour. Furthermore, by looking at the responses of those seemingly rational participants in control tasks, it becomes clear that most lack a basic understanding of the incentives of the game. We argue that the use of a default option, confusion and other behavioural biases account for the vast majority of truthful play in both TTC and DA in laboratory experiments.
AB - We introduce two novel matching mechanisms, Reverse Top Trading Cycles (RTTC) and Reverse Deferred Acceptance (RDA), with the purpose of challenging the idea that the theoretical property of strategy-proofness induces high rates of truth-telling in economic experiments. RTTC and RDA are identical to the celebrated Top Trading Cycles (TTC) and Deferred Acceptance (DA) mechanisms, respectively, in all their theoretical properties except that their dominant-strategy equilibrium is to report one’s preferences in the order opposite to the way they were induced. With the focal truth-telling strategy being out of equilibrium, we are able to perform a clear measurement of how much of the truth-telling reported for strategy-proof mechanisms is compatible with rational behaviour and how much of it is caused by confused decision-makers following a default, focal strategy without understanding the structure of the game. In a school-allocation setting, we find that roughly half of the observed truth-telling under TTC and DA is the result of naïve (non-strategic) behaviour. Only 14–31% of the participants choose actions in RTTC and RDA that are compatible with rational behaviour. Furthermore, by looking at the responses of those seemingly rational participants in control tasks, it becomes clear that most lack a basic understanding of the incentives of the game. We argue that the use of a default option, confusion and other behavioural biases account for the vast majority of truthful play in both TTC and DA in laboratory experiments.
KW - Laboratory experiment
KW - Matching
KW - Revelation principle
KW - School choice
KW - Strategy-proofness
KW - Truth-telling
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U2 - 10.1007/s10683-020-09665-9
DO - 10.1007/s10683-020-09665-9
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85089604956
SN - 1386-4157
VL - 24
SP - 650
EP - 668
JO - Experimental Economics
JF - Experimental Economics
IS - 2
ER -