2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.jet.2006.04.003
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Credulity, lies, and costly talk

Abstract: This paper studies a model of strategic communication by an informed and upwardly biased sender to one or more receivers. Applications include situations in which (i) it is costly for the sender to misrepresent information, due to legal, technological, or moral constraints, or (ii) receivers may be credulous and blindly believe the sender's recommendation. In contrast to the predictions obtained in Crawford and Sobel's [9] benchmark cheap talk model, our model admits a fully separating equilibrium, provided th… Show more

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Cited by 343 publications
(216 citation statements)
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“…This should be contrasted with Kartik et al (2007) who exhibit biased equilibrium outcomes in a variant of Crawford and Sobel's (1982) model where the receiver is naive (i.e., blindly plays the recommended action) with an exogenous and strictly positive probability. 27…”
Section: Strategic Information Transmissionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This should be contrasted with Kartik et al (2007) who exhibit biased equilibrium outcomes in a variant of Crawford and Sobel's (1982) model where the receiver is naive (i.e., blindly plays the recommended action) with an exogenous and strictly positive probability. 27…”
Section: Strategic Information Transmissionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The condition V 12 ≤ 0 ("manipulation monotonicity"), required in Theorem 4.3, is mild and satisfied in almost all examples we know of (though it does fail in Kartik, Ottaviani, and Squintani (2007)). It requires that the informed agent's gain from manipulating the uninformed beliefs upwards does not increase in her type.…”
Section: For Anymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consider an arbitrary menu (D h , D ) of delegation sets. 18 Let p ∈ {h, } and consider an action y / ∈ D p which is non-redundant in the sense that, when added to the delegation set, it would be chosen in some state, i.e.,…”
Section: Information and Loss-of-control Effectmentioning
confidence: 99%