%0 Report %A Castillo, Marco %A Dickinson, David L. %T Sleep Restriction Increases Coordination Failure %D 2020 %8 2020 May %I Institute of Labor Economics (IZA) %C Bonn %7 IZA Discussion Paper %N 13242 %U https://www.iza.org/publications/dp13242 %X When group outcomes depend on minimal effort (e.g., disease containment, work teams, or indigenous hunt success), a classic coordination problem exists. Using a well-established paradigm, we examine how a common cognitive state (insufficient sleep) impacts coordination outcomes. Our data indicate that insufficient sleep increases coordination failure costs, which suggests that the sleep or, more generally, cognitive composition of a group might determine its ability to escape from a trap of costly miscoordination and wasted cooperative efforts. These findings are first evidence of the potentially large externality of a commonly experienced biological state (insufficient sleep) that has infiltrated many societies. %K cooperative dilemma %K sleep %K coordination games