YALE DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS
COMMUNICATION AND LEARNING Luca Anderlini, Dino Gerardi and Roger Lagunoff February 2008 We study the intergenerational accumulation of knowledge in an
infinite-horizon model of communication. Each in a sequence of players receives an
informative but imperfect signal of the once-and-for-all realization of an unobserved
state. The state affects all players' preferences over present and future decisions. Each
player observes his own signal but does not directly observe the realized signals or
actions of his predecessors. Instead, he must rely on cheap-talk messages from the
previous players to fathom the past. Each player is therefore both a receiver of
information with respect to his decision, and a sender with respect to all future
decisions. Senders' preferences are misaligned with those of future decision makers. |