Name File Type Size Last Modified
Fct_Test_Vuong.ado text/plain 3.6 KB 05/20/2018 06:13:AM
analysis.do text/x-stata-syntax 18.2 KB 05/20/2018 06:13:AM
codebook.txt text/plain 8.6 KB 05/20/2018 06:13:AM
file_description.txt text/plain 737 bytes 05/20/2018 06:13:AM
  graphs 05/20/2018 10:13:AM
human.dta application/x-stata 844.9 KB 05/20/2018 06:13:AM
human_eff.dta application/x-stata 23.5 KB 05/20/2018 06:13:AM
human_stab.dta application/x-stata 19.9 KB 05/20/2018 06:13:AM
robot_emp.dta application/x-stata 390.2 KB 05/20/2018 06:13:AM
robot_truth_ia.dta application/x-stata 138 KB 05/20/2018 06:13:AM
temp.dta application/x-stata 706.8 KB 05/20/2018 06:13:AM
vuong_test_launch.do text/x-stata-syntax 3.4 KB 05/20/2018 06:13:AM
    Total of 12 records. Records per page

Project Citation: 

Chen, Yan, Jiang, Ming, Kesten, Onur, Robin, Stéphane, and Zhu, Min. Dataset for “Matching in the large: An experimental study.” Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2020-09-07. https://doi.org/10.3886/E103521V1

Project Description

Summary:  View help for Summary We compare the performance of the Boston Immediate Acceptance (IA) and Gale--Shapley Deferred Acceptance (DA) mechanisms in a laboratory setting where we increase the number of participants per match. In our experiment, we first increase the number of students per match from 4 to 40; when we do so, participant truth-telling increases under DA but decreases under IA, leading to a decrease in efficiency under both mechanisms. Furthermore, we find that DA remains more stable than IA, regardless of scale. We then further increase the number of participants per match to 4,000 through the introduction of robots. When robots report their preferences truthfully, we find that scale has no effect on human best response behavior. By contrast, when we program the robots to draw their strategies from the distribution of empirical human strategies, we find that our increase in scale increases human ex-post best responses under both mechanisms.
Funding Sources:  View help for Funding Sources National Science Foundation (SES-0962492); Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR-13-BSHS1-0010); National Natural Science Foundation of China (71704013); ANR (ANR-11-IDEX-007); Shanghai Pujiang Program (17PJC059)

Scope of Project

Subject Terms:  View help for Subject Terms matching; experiment; school choice; scale
Geographic Coverage:  View help for Geographic Coverage Beijing, China
Time Period(s):  View help for Time Period(s) 5/30/2012 – 7/3/2012; 5/6/2013 – 5/12/2013
Collection Date(s):  View help for Collection Date(s) 5/30/2012 – 7/3/2012; 5/6/2013 – 5/12/2013
Universe:  View help for Universe College students in Beijing, China
Data Type(s):  View help for Data Type(s) experimental data
Collection Notes:  View help for Collection Notes All sessions are conducted in Chinese at the Experiment Economics Laboratory and the Finance Simulation Laboratory at Beijing Normal University between June 2012 and May 2013. The subjects are students from Beijing Normal University and the Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications. No subject participates more than once. We conduct 12 independent sessions for the all-human treatments and 320 independent observations for the human–robot treatments, with a total of 736 subjects. The exchange rate is 5 experiment points for 1 RMB for all sessions. Each subject also receives a participation fee of 5 RMB. The average earning (including participation fee) is 63.8 RMB.


Related Publications

Published Versions

Export Metadata

Report a Problem

Found a serious problem with the data, such as disclosure risk or copyrighted content? Let us know.

This material is distributed exactly as it arrived from the data depositor. ICPSR has not checked or processed this material. Users should consult the investigator(s) if further information is desired.