<p><u>Panel A</u> shows an Active Trial where the participant will receive 64 cents and the Red Cross donation will be reduced by 2 cents. Participants are asked to accept or reject this offer. <u>Panel B</u> shows an Attentional Control Trial where the participant will lose 2 cents and the Red Cross donation will be reduced by 8 cents. We term this kind of Attention Control trials, “Logically-Reject” Trials. <u>Panel C</u> shows an Attention Control Trial where the participant will gain 32 cents and the Red Cross donation won’t change. We term these “Logically-Accept” Trials. <u>Panel D</u> shows a Calculation Trial where the You number (+8) is not bigger than the Red Cross number +16). Note: The circle remains red for 5 seconds, allowing ...
<p>(A) Willingness to pay for respondents that refused or donated in the real campaigns for the corr...
<p>A trial consists of three subsequent steps: (A) The visual stimuli shown in a single trial as two...
<p>On each trial, participants were first presented with a card indicating the chances of winning (a...
<p><b>2.A</b>: Matrix with “You Gain” values (Y axis) and “Red Cross Loses” values (X axis) in cents...
<p>Note: <b>A</b>. An offer in which the subject will receive 32 cents and the Red Cross donation wi...
<p>Each panel shows a screen display, with the series of screens in a trial progressing from top lef...
<p>Trial types are illustrated as a function of outcome valence (yellow for money trials and blue fo...
<p>First, participants were informed for whom they would be gambling (self, best friend, or child), ...
<div><p>a. Acceptance rates in percent categorized according the amount of money offered to the subj...
<p>Male soccer fans played the UG as responders and could either accept or reject the offer made by ...
<p>In each block, subjects played 20 trials of a matching pennies game with what they believed was e...
<p>Presentation times of each trial event are indicated below the corresponding screen. At feedback ...
<p>Presentation times of each trial event are indicated below the corresponding screen. At feedback ...
<p>The left part of the screen shows the name of the proposer at the top (here “Proposer”) and the n...
<p>White circles indicate the subject's gaze position. Arrows denote a saccade or stimulus jump. Eac...
<p>(A) Willingness to pay for respondents that refused or donated in the real campaigns for the corr...
<p>A trial consists of three subsequent steps: (A) The visual stimuli shown in a single trial as two...
<p>On each trial, participants were first presented with a card indicating the chances of winning (a...
<p><b>2.A</b>: Matrix with “You Gain” values (Y axis) and “Red Cross Loses” values (X axis) in cents...
<p>Note: <b>A</b>. An offer in which the subject will receive 32 cents and the Red Cross donation wi...
<p>Each panel shows a screen display, with the series of screens in a trial progressing from top lef...
<p>Trial types are illustrated as a function of outcome valence (yellow for money trials and blue fo...
<p>First, participants were informed for whom they would be gambling (self, best friend, or child), ...
<div><p>a. Acceptance rates in percent categorized according the amount of money offered to the subj...
<p>Male soccer fans played the UG as responders and could either accept or reject the offer made by ...
<p>In each block, subjects played 20 trials of a matching pennies game with what they believed was e...
<p>Presentation times of each trial event are indicated below the corresponding screen. At feedback ...
<p>Presentation times of each trial event are indicated below the corresponding screen. At feedback ...
<p>The left part of the screen shows the name of the proposer at the top (here “Proposer”) and the n...
<p>White circles indicate the subject's gaze position. Arrows denote a saccade or stimulus jump. Eac...
<p>(A) Willingness to pay for respondents that refused or donated in the real campaigns for the corr...
<p>A trial consists of three subsequent steps: (A) The visual stimuli shown in a single trial as two...
<p>On each trial, participants were first presented with a card indicating the chances of winning (a...