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Dive into the research topics where Alistair J. Wilson is active.

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Featured researches published by Alistair J. Wilson.


Quantitative Economics | 2016

Clearinghouses for two‐sided matching: An experimental study

Federico Echenique; Alistair J. Wilson; Leeat Yariv

We experimentally study the Gale and Shapley, 1962 mechanism, which is utilized in a wide set of applications, most prominently the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP). Several insights come out of our analysis. First, only 48% of our observed outcomes are stable, and among those a large majority culminate at the receiver-optimal stable matching. Second, receivers rarely truncate their true preferences: it is the proposers who do not make offers in order of their preference, frequently skipping potential partners. Third, market characteristics affect behavior: both the cardinal representation and core size influence whether laboratory outcomes are stable. We conclude by using our controlled results and a behavioral model to shed light on a number of stylized facts we derive from new NRMP survey and outcome data, and to explain the small cores previously documented for the NRMP.


Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | 2013

A game theoretic approach to multimodal communication

Alistair J. Wilson; Mark Dean; James P. Higham

Over the last few decades the animal communication community has become increasingly aware that much communication occurs using multiple signals in multiple modalities. The majority of this work has been empirical, with less theoretical work on the advantages conferred by such communication. In the present paper, we ask: Why should animals communicate with multiple signals in multiple modalities? To tackle this question we use game theoretic techniques, and highlight developments in the economic signaling literature that might offer insight into biological problems. We start by establishing a signaling game, and investigate signal honesty under two prevailing paradigms of honest communication – costly signaling and cheap talk. In both paradigms, without further constraint, it is simple to show that anything that can be achieved with multiple signals can be achieved with one. We go on to investigate different sets of possible constraints that may make multiple signals and multimodal signals in particular more likely to evolve. We suggest that constraints on cost functions and bandwidths, orthogonal noise across modalities, strategically distinct modes, multiple qualities, multiple signalers, and multiple audiences, all provide biologically plausible scenarios that theoretically favor multiple and multimodal signaling.


behavioral and quantitative game theory on conference on future directions | 2010

A field study on matching with network externalities

Alistair J. Wilson; Mariagiovanna Baccara; Ayse Imrohoroglu; Leeat Yariv

We study the effects of network externalities on a unique matching protocol for faculty in a large U.S. professional school to offices in a new building. We collected institutional, web, and survey data on facultys attributes and choices. We first identify the different layers of the social network: institutional affiliation, coauthorships, and friendships. We demonstrate and quantify the effects of network externalities on choices and outcomes. Furthermore, we disentangle the different layers of the social network and quantify their relative impact. Finally, we assess the matching protocol from a welfare perspective. Our study suggests the importance and feasibility of accounting for network externalities in general assignment problems and evaluates a set of techniques that can be employed to this end.


The American Economic Review | 2012

A Field Study on Matching with Network Externalities

Mariagiovanna Baccara; Ayse Imrohoroglu; Alistair J. Wilson; Leeat Yariv


Quantitative Economics | 2016

Communication with multiple senders: An experiment

Emanuel Vespa; Alistair J. Wilson


The American Economic Review | 2017

Assessing the Rate of Replication in Economics

James Berry; Lucas C. Coffman; Douglas Hanley; Rania Gihleb; Alistair J. Wilson


Journal of the Economic Science Association | 2016

The slider task: an example of restricted inference on incentive effects

Felipe Augusto de Araujo; Erin Carbone; Lynn Conell-Price; Marli W. Dunietz; Ania Jaroszewicz; Rachel Landsman; Diego Lamé; Lise Vesterlund; Stephanie W. Wang; Alistair J. Wilson


Archive | 2012

Communication With Multiple Senders and Multiple Dimensions: An Experiment

Alistair J. Wilson; Emanuel Vespa


Archive | 2015

The Effect of Incentives on Real Effort: Evidence from the Slider Task

Felipe Augusto de Araujo; Erin Carbone; Lynn Conell-Price; Marli W. Dunietz; Ania Jaroszewicz; Rachel Landsman; Diego Lamé; Lise Vesterlund; Stephanie W. Wang; Alistair J. Wilson


Archive | 2012

Costly Communication in Groups: Theory and an Experiment

Alistair J. Wilson

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Diego Lamé

University of Pittsburgh

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Emanuel Vespa

University of California

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Leeat Yariv

California Institute of Technology

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Ania Jaroszewicz

Carnegie Mellon University

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Ayse Imrohoroglu

University of Southern California

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Erin Carbone

University of Pittsburgh

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Lynn Conell-Price

Carnegie Mellon University

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