The present study investigates how group-cooperation heuristics boost voluntary contributions in a repeated public goods game. We manipulate two separate factors in a two-person public goods game: i) group composition (Selfish Subjects vs. Conditional Cooperators) and ii) common knowledge about group composition (Information vs. No Information). In addition, we let the subjects signal expectations of the other’s contributions in the experiment’s second phase. Common knowledge of Selfish type alone slightly dampens contributions but dramatically increases contributions when signaling of expectations is allowed. The results suggest that group-cooperation heuristics are triggered when two factors are jointly salient to the agent: (i) that ther...
In this paperwe explore the onset of cooperative traits in the public goods game. This well-known ga...
Following the notion that organizations often face public good dilemmas when collective action is ne...
In public goods environments, the threat to punish non-contributors may increase contributions. Howe...
The present study investigates how group-cooperation heuristics boost voluntary contributions in a r...
The present study investigates how group-cooperation heuristics boosts voluntary contributions to pu...
The present study investigates how group-cooperation heuristics boost voluntary contributions in a r...
peer reviewedIn finitely repeated public goods games, contributions are initially high, and graduall...
What makes people cooperate? How can one design mechanisms in order to incentivize players to contri...
We extend the study of behavioural types in voluntary contribution games, adapting the elicitation m...
Many people contribute to public goods but stop doing so once they experience free riding. We test t...
How people cooperate to provide public goods is an important scientific question and relates to many...
The goal of this research is to examine how various grouping designs affect the level of cooperation...
We examine the influence of optimism about local and foreign people on social cooperation using a pu...
People behave much more cooperatively than predicted by the self-interest hypothesis in social dilem...
There is a large body of evidence showing that a substantial proportion of people cooperate in publi...
In this paperwe explore the onset of cooperative traits in the public goods game. This well-known ga...
Following the notion that organizations often face public good dilemmas when collective action is ne...
In public goods environments, the threat to punish non-contributors may increase contributions. Howe...
The present study investigates how group-cooperation heuristics boost voluntary contributions in a r...
The present study investigates how group-cooperation heuristics boosts voluntary contributions to pu...
The present study investigates how group-cooperation heuristics boost voluntary contributions in a r...
peer reviewedIn finitely repeated public goods games, contributions are initially high, and graduall...
What makes people cooperate? How can one design mechanisms in order to incentivize players to contri...
We extend the study of behavioural types in voluntary contribution games, adapting the elicitation m...
Many people contribute to public goods but stop doing so once they experience free riding. We test t...
How people cooperate to provide public goods is an important scientific question and relates to many...
The goal of this research is to examine how various grouping designs affect the level of cooperation...
We examine the influence of optimism about local and foreign people on social cooperation using a pu...
People behave much more cooperatively than predicted by the self-interest hypothesis in social dilem...
There is a large body of evidence showing that a substantial proportion of people cooperate in publi...
In this paperwe explore the onset of cooperative traits in the public goods game. This well-known ga...
Following the notion that organizations often face public good dilemmas when collective action is ne...
In public goods environments, the threat to punish non-contributors may increase contributions. Howe...