| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 957105 | Journal of Economic Theory | 2011 | 24 Pages | 
Abstract
												This paper studies communication games in which the sender is possibly honest (tells the truth) and the receiver is possibly naive (follows messages as if truthful). The characterization of message-monotone equilibria in the perturbed games explain several important aspects of strategic communication including sender exaggeration, receiver skepticism and message clustering. Surprisingly, the strategic receiver may respond to more aggressive claims with more moderate actions. In the limit as the probabilities of the non-strategic players approach zero, (i) the limit equilibrium corresponds to a most-informative equilibrium of the limit (Crawford–Sobel) game; (ii) only the top messages are sent.
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											Authors
												Ying Chen, 
											