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Learning from Neighbors about a Changing State

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  • Krishna Dasaratha
  • Benjamin Golub
  • Nir Hak

Abstract

Agents learn about a changing state using private signals and their neighbors' past estimates of the state. We present a model in which Bayesian agents in equilibrium use neighbors' estimates simply by taking weighted sums with time-invariant weights. The dynamics thus parallel those of the tractable DeGroot model of learning in networks, but arise as an equilibrium outcome rather than a behavioral assumption. We examine whether information aggregation is nearly optimal as neighborhoods grow large. A key condition for this is signal diversity: each individual's neighbors have private signals that not only contain independent information, but also have sufficiently different distributions. Without signal diversity $\unicode{x2013}$ e.g., if private signals are i.i.d. $\unicode{x2013}$ learning is suboptimal in all networks and highly inefficient in some. Turning to social influence, we find it is much more sensitive to one's signal quality than to one's number of neighbors, in contrast to standard models with exogenous updating rules.

Suggested Citation

  • Krishna Dasaratha & Benjamin Golub & Nir Hak, 2018. "Learning from Neighbors about a Changing State," Papers 1801.02042, arXiv.org, revised Nov 2022.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:1801.02042
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

    1. Raphael L'evy & Marcin Pk{e}ski & Nicolas Vieille, 2022. "Stationary social learning in a changing environment," Papers 2201.02122, arXiv.org.
    2. Wanying Huang & Philipp Strack & Omer Tamuz, 2024. "Learning in Repeated Interactions on Networks," Econometrica, Econometric Society, vol. 92(1), pages 1-27, January.
    3. Sebastiano Della Lena, 2019. "Non-Bayesian Social Learning and the Spread of Misinformation in Networks," Working Papers 2019:09, Department of Economics, University of Venice "Ca' Foscari".
    4. Ilai Bistritz & Nasimeh Heydaribeni & Achilleas Anastasopoulos, 2019. "Do Informational Cascades Happen with Non-myopic Agents?," Papers 1905.01327, arXiv.org, revised Jul 2022.

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