Why are people more willing to accept some governmental decisions than others? In this article, we present results from a series of original experiments showing that people’s reactions to a given outcome are heavily influenced by the procedure employed to produce the outcome.We find that subjects reactmuch less favorably when a decision maker intentionally keeps a large payoff, thereby leaving the subject with a small payoff, than when that same payoff results from a procedure based on chance or on desert. Moreover, subjects react less favorably to outcomes rendered by decision makers who want to be decision makers than they do to identical outcomes selected by reluctant decision makers. Our results are consistent with increasingly prominen...
abstract: Human societies are unique in the level of cooperation among non-kin. Evolutionary models ...
The main contribution of this paper is twofold. First of all, it focuses on the decisional process t...
Decision makers in positions of power often make unobserved choices under risk and uncertainty. In m...
Why are people more willing to accept some governmental decisions than others? In this article, we p...
Why are people more willing to accept some governmental decisions than others? In this article, we p...
Research on the formal properties of democratic aggregation mechanisms has a long tradition in polit...
Many experiments comparing individual and group behavior find that groups behave more egoistically t...
Why do some decision makers prefer big multilateral agreements while others prefer cooperation in sm...
Research suggests that people prefer human over algorithmic decision-makers at work. Most of these s...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2009. Major: Economics. Advisor: Aldo Rustichini....
We test whether deciding on behalf of a passive third party makes participants less selfish in a sub...
Negotiating with others about how finite resources should be distributed is an important aspect of h...
Mechanisms supporting human ultra-cooperativeness are very much subject to debate. One psychological...
peer reviewedWe investigate whether and how an individual giving decision is affected in risky envir...
In the standard one-shot Prisoner’s Dilemma game, participants often choose to cooperate, when the o...
abstract: Human societies are unique in the level of cooperation among non-kin. Evolutionary models ...
The main contribution of this paper is twofold. First of all, it focuses on the decisional process t...
Decision makers in positions of power often make unobserved choices under risk and uncertainty. In m...
Why are people more willing to accept some governmental decisions than others? In this article, we p...
Why are people more willing to accept some governmental decisions than others? In this article, we p...
Research on the formal properties of democratic aggregation mechanisms has a long tradition in polit...
Many experiments comparing individual and group behavior find that groups behave more egoistically t...
Why do some decision makers prefer big multilateral agreements while others prefer cooperation in sm...
Research suggests that people prefer human over algorithmic decision-makers at work. Most of these s...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2009. Major: Economics. Advisor: Aldo Rustichini....
We test whether deciding on behalf of a passive third party makes participants less selfish in a sub...
Negotiating with others about how finite resources should be distributed is an important aspect of h...
Mechanisms supporting human ultra-cooperativeness are very much subject to debate. One psychological...
peer reviewedWe investigate whether and how an individual giving decision is affected in risky envir...
In the standard one-shot Prisoner’s Dilemma game, participants often choose to cooperate, when the o...
abstract: Human societies are unique in the level of cooperation among non-kin. Evolutionary models ...
The main contribution of this paper is twofold. First of all, it focuses on the decisional process t...
Decision makers in positions of power often make unobserved choices under risk and uncertainty. In m...