Difference between revisions of "Battaglini, M. (2002), Multiple Referrals and Multidimensional Cheap Talk"
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Revision as of 16:32, 7 October 2011
Abstract
In previous work on cheap talk, uncertainty has almost always been modeled using a single-dimensional state variable. In this paper we prove that the dimensionality of the uncertain variable has an important qualitative impact on results and yields interesting insights into the "mechanics" of information transmission. Contrary to the unidimensional case, if there is more than one sender, full revelation of information in all states of nature is generically possible, even when the conflict of interest is arbitrarily large. What really matters in transmission of information is the local behavior of senders' indifference curves at the ideal point of the receiver, not the proximity of players' ideal point.
Rui's Intro points
- Departure point is the Gilligan/Krehbeil paper or Crawford/Sobel.
- Focused NOT on the open/closed rule angle, but more generally on the conflict (difference in ideal points) between commitee/floor or agent/principle.
- Basic idea: "As someone listening to multiple biased experts, I can ask pointed questions to fully reveal the information that the biased experts have." -- Rui, who says this is a loose, intuitive way of understanding the point.
Model
- Choice space: [math]x\in R^{2}[/math], a pair of reals.
- Outcomes: [math]y=x+\theta, \theta\in R^{2}[/math]. Note that here, [math]\theta[/math] is akin to [math]\omega[/math] in Gilligan and Krehbeilh.
- Preferences: Single peaked. Ideal point of receiver is [math]x^{R}=(0,0[/math].