Peer Reviewed Article

Observational Learning: Evidence from a Randomized Natural Field Experiment

Authors
  • Hongbin Cai
  • Yuyu Chen
  • Hanming Fang
Published
November 1, 2009
Publication
American Economic Review
Discipline
Areas of Study
Geographic Areas
Document Control Number(s)
  • ISPS 09-029
Citation

Hongbin Cai, Yuyu Chen, and Hanming Fang (2009), “Observational Learning: Evidence from a Randomized Natural Field Experiment,” American Economic Review 99(3): 864–882.

Abstract

We report results from a randomized natural field experiment conducted in a restaurant dining setting to distinguish the observational learning effect from the saliency effect. We find that, when customers are given ranking information of the five most popular dishes, the demand for those dishes increases by 13 to 20 percent. We do not find a significant saliency effect. We also find modest evidence that the observational learning effects are stronger among infrequent customers, and that dining satisfaction is increased when customers are presented with the information of the top five dishes, but not when presented with only names of some sample dishes.

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