Economic and Game Theory
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"Inside every small problem is a large problem struggling to get out." | ||||||
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strength when weak ("bluffing"). I've seen bluffing discussed in the classic normative sense of optimal bluffing stragies (e.g., evolutionary game theory literature, "Chicken", Von Neumann and Morgenstern's classic poker discussion). However, I have not seen *any* behavioral work that relates the models to what people actually do. "Bluffing" and related terms don't even appear in the index to Camerer's comprehensive book. This all seems a bit strange to me, as bluffing -- which people may or may not interpret as deceit -- seems to have rich psychological implications. Does anyone have references for behavioral studies of bluffing (or perhaps some other literature that gets to the same idea)? Likewise, if anyone has thoughts about why studying bluffing in a behavioral context may not make sense, then I would love to know those thoughts (better to read them now than in a letter about why my manuscript was rejected!). Contact via email is appreciated. Regards, Jay McCauley PhD student in cognitive psychology at the University of Washington [Manage messages] |