Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
884344 Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 2009 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Iterated elimination of strictly dominated strategies has a stronger epistemic foundation than iterated elimination of weakly dominated strategies. In this paper I investigate experimentally whether this translates into actual differences in behavior. In particular, I analyze whether it affects subjects’ depth of reasoning. This is done within two slightly different versions of a betting game under asymmetric information, in which very similar steps of reasoning can be applied to reach no-betting, or non-speculative, behavior, but of which only one can be solved by iterated elimination of strictly dominated strategies. The results indicate that strength of dominance matters indeed.

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