articleAmerican Economic ReviewNov 1, 2005Closed access

Cooperation under the Shadow of the Future: Experimental Evidence from Infinitely Repeated Games

Brown University

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

While there is an extensive literature on the theory of infinitely repeated games, empirical evidence on how “the shadow of the future” affects behavior is scarce and inconclusive. I simulate infinitely repeated prisoner's dilemma games in the lab with a random continuation rule. The experimental design represents an improvement over the existing literature by including sessions with finite repeated games as controls and a large number of players per session (which allows for learning without contagion effects). I find that the shadow of the future matters not only by significantly reducing opportunistic behavior, but also because its impact closely follows theoretical predictions.

Citation impact

649
total citations
FWCI
22.68
Percentile
100%
References
28
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Shadow (psychology)
  • Prisoner's dilemma
  • Dilemma
  • Economics
  • Repeated game
  • Session (web analytics)
  • Mathematical economics
  • Continuation
No related works found for this paper.