2016
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2798709
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Cognitive Ability and Games of School Choice

Abstract: We take school admission mechanisms to the lab to test whether the widely-used manipulable Boston-mechanism disadvantages students of lower cognitive ability and whether this leads to ability segregation across schools. Results show this is the case: lower ability participants receive lower payoffs and are over-represented at the worst school. Under the strategy-proof Deferred Acceptance mechanism, payoff differences are reduced, and ability distributions across schools harmonized. Hence, we find support for t… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
2

Citation Types

2
16
0

Year Published

2016
2016
2021
2021

Publication Types

Select...
7

Relationship

2
5

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 12 publications
(18 citation statements)
references
References 21 publications
2
16
0
Order By: Relevance
“…In a parallel paper [Basteck and Mantovani, 2016], we report experimental evidence confirming that-absent detailed information on previous applications-BOS increases the gap between subjects of different cognitive ability compared to DA. Subjects of higher ability fare better than their peers of lower ability: because they are less able to identify optimal strategies in BOS, the latter earn significantly less and are over-represented at the worst school, resulting in ability segregation across schools.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 56%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…In a parallel paper [Basteck and Mantovani, 2016], we report experimental evidence confirming that-absent detailed information on previous applications-BOS increases the gap between subjects of different cognitive ability compared to DA. Subjects of higher ability fare better than their peers of lower ability: because they are less able to identify optimal strategies in BOS, the latter earn significantly less and are over-represented at the worst school, resulting in ability segregation across schools.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 56%
“…The decision environment and part of the treatments are borrowed from Basteck and Mantovani [2016]. We briefly summarize them, together with the presentation of the novel treatments, in this section.…”
Section: Experimental Design and Proceduresmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…For intermediate levels, mechanisms become key if the dominant strategy is easier to see than in others. In a related paper, Basteck and Mantovani (2016) find that subjects with a low cognitive ability play the dominant strategy less frequently in the deferred acceptance algorithm than high-ability subjects. The relation between the individuals' ability for contingent reasoning and their cognitive ability in matching markets remains an open question.…”
mentioning
confidence: 93%