Managing Congestion in a Matching Market via Demand Information Disclosure

被引:11
|
作者
Huang, Ni [1 ]
Burtch, Gordon [2 ]
He, Yumei [3 ]
Hong, Yili [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Miami, Miami Herbert Business Sch, Coral Gables, FL 33146 USA
[2] Boston Univ, Questrom Sch Business, Boston, MA 02215 USA
[3] Tulane Univ, Freeman Sch Business, New Orleans, LA 70118 USA
关键词
information disclosure; congestion; matching efficiency; online dating; platform design; ONLINE; PRODUCT; UNCERTAINTY; ACCEPTANCE; MODEL;
D O I
10.1287/isre.2022.1148
中图分类号
G25 [图书馆学、图书馆事业]; G35 [情报学、情报工作];
学科分类号
1205 ; 120501 ;
摘要
Congestion is a common issue in digital platform markets, wherein users tend to focus their attention on a subset of popular peers. We examine this issue in the context of online dating, considering the potential efficacy of an informational intervention, namely, the disclosure of peers' recent demand. In doing so, we first note that the benefits of disclosing demand information are not altogether clear in this context, a priori, because dating platforms are distinct from other platforms in several important respects. On the one hand, dating platforms facilitate social relationships, rather than trade in goods and services. Therefore, they operate on different norms and typically lack common levers that platform operators employ to balance supply and demand, such as pricing mechanisms and reputation systems. Dating app users may therefore pay greater attention to the quality implications of peer demand information, worsening congestion. On the other hand, demand information disclosure may be atypically effective at mitigating congestion in a dating context because, in addition to opportunity costs of time and effort, daters also bear fears of social rejection, leading them to shy away from in-demand peers. We evaluate our treatment's efficacy in mitigating congestion and improving matching efficiency, conducting a randomized field experiment at a largemobile dating platform. Our results show that the intervention is particularly effective at improving matching efficiency when presented in tandem with a textual message-framing cue that highlights the capacity implications of the peer demand information. Heterogeneity analyses further indicate that these effects are driven primarily by those users whomost contendwith congestion in the formof competition, namely, male users and thosewho relymore heavily upon outboundmessages formatches.
引用
收藏
页码:1196 / 1220
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] INFORMATION DISCLOSURE IN THE TWO-SIDED MARKET
    Gong, Yaxian
    Lu, Yuanzhu
    SINGAPORE ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2021, 66 (05): : 1373 - 1396
  • [22] Managing market risk with conditioning information
    Famy, George
    JOURNAL OF ASSET MANAGEMENT, 2007, 7 (06) : 412 - 418
  • [23] Managing Supply Uncertainty with an Information Market
    Guo, Zhiling
    Fang, Fang
    Whinston, Andrew B.
    EXPLORING THE GRAND CHALLENGES FOR NEXT GENERATION E-BUSINESS, 2010, 52 : 80 - 95
  • [24] Managing market risk with conditioning information
    George Famy
    Journal of Asset Management, 2007, 7 (6) : 412 - 418
  • [25] Congestion Management Using Demand Response Programs in Power Market
    Shayesteh, E.
    Moghaddam, M. Parsa
    Taherynejhad, S.
    Sheikh-EL-Eslami, M. K.
    2008 IEEE POWER & ENERGY SOCIETY GENERAL MEETING, VOLS 1-11, 2008, : 4589 - 4596
  • [26] Managing bottleneck congestion with tradable credit scheme under demand uncertainty
    Zhang, Fang
    Lu, Jian
    Hu, Xiaojian
    Fan, Ruochuan
    Chen, Junlan
    RESEARCH IN TRANSPORTATION ECONOMICS, 2022, 95
  • [27] Improving the Information Disclosure in Mobility-on-Demand Systems
    Yang, Yue
    Shi, Yuan
    Wang, Dejian
    Chen, Qisheng
    Xu, Lei
    Li, Hanqian
    Fu, Zhouyu
    Li, Xin
    Zhang, Hao
    KDD '21: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 27TH ACM SIGKDD CONFERENCE ON KNOWLEDGE DISCOVERY & DATA MINING, 2021, : 3854 - 3864
  • [28] When Congestion Games Meet Mobile Crowdsourcing: Selective Information Disclosure
    Li, Hongbo
    Duan, Lingjie
    THIRTY-SEVENTH AAAI CONFERENCE ON ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, VOL 37 NO 5, 2023, : 5739 - 5746
  • [29] THE DEMAND FOR LABOR-MARKET INFORMATION
    KAHN, LM
    LOW, SA
    SOUTHERN ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 1990, 56 (04) : 1044 - 1058
  • [30] Information demand and stock market volatility
    Vlastakis, Nikolaos
    Markellos, Raphael N.
    JOURNAL OF BANKING & FINANCE, 2012, 36 (06) : 1808 - 1821