TL;DR
This paper introduces $ ext{ extbackslash alpha}$-moral mechanisms in auction theory, modeling players who prefer truth-telling and only lie if beneficial, and explores how this affects revenue extraction and mechanism design.
Contribution
It develops a new class of moral mechanisms incorporating players' truth-telling preferences and analyzes their properties and revenue implications in single-item auctions.
Findings
Players with moral preferences can lead to higher revenue with correlated values.
Truthful mechanisms remain revenue-maximizing under independent regular distributions.
Allocation functions in moral mechanisms lack simple characterization like monotonicity.
Abstract
A rapidly growing literature on lying in behavioral economics and psychology shows that individuals often do not lie even when lying maximizes their utility. In this work, we attempt to incorporate these findings into the theory of mechanism design. We consider players that have a preference for truth-telling and will only lie if their benefit from lying is sufficiently larger than the loss of the others. To accommodate such players, we introduce -moral mechanisms, in which the gain of a player from misreporting his true value, comparing to truth-telling, is at most times the loss that the others incur due to misreporting. We develop a theory of moral mechanisms in the canonical setting of single-item auctions. We identify similarities and disparities to the standard theory of truthful mechanisms. In particular, we show that the allocation function does not uniquely…
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Videos
Mechanism Design with Moral Bidders· youtube
