%0 Generic
%A Costa-Gomes, M.A.
%A Weizsacker, G.
%C London, UK
%D 2004
%F discovery:14580
%I ESRC Centre for Economic Learning and Social Evolution
%K JEL C72, C92, C51, D84. Noncooperative games, experimental economics, beliefs, bounded rationality
%N 95
%T Stated belief and play in normal form games
%U https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/14580/
%X Using data on one-shot games, we investigate the assumption that players respond to  underlying expectations about their opponent�s behavior. In our laboratory experiments, subjects  play a set of 14 two-person 3x3 games, and state first order beliefs about their opponent�s  behavior. The sets of responses in the two tasks are largely inconsistent. Rather, we find  evidence that the subjects perceive the games differently when they (i) choose actions, and (ii)  state beliefs � they appear to pay more attention to the opponent�s incentives when they state  beliefs than when they play the games. On average, they fail to best respond to their own stated  beliefs in almost half of the games. The inconsistency is confirmed by estimates of a unified  statistical model that jointly uses the actions and the belief statements. There, we can control for  noise, and formulate a statistical test that rejects consistency. Effects of the belief elicitation  procedure on subsequent actions are mostly insignificant.