When deciding for others based on explicitly described odds and outcomes, people often have different risk preferences for others than for themselves. In two pre-registered experiments, we examine risk preference for others where people learn about the odds and outcomes by experiencing them through sampling. In both experiments, on average, people were more risk averse for others than for themselves, but only when the risky option had a higher expected value. Furthermore, based on a separate set of choices, we classified people as pro- or anti-social. Only those people classified as anti-social were more risk averse for others, whereas those classified as prosocial chose similarly for themselves and others. When the uncertainty was removed,...
Idiosyncratic risk attitudes are usually assumed to be commonly known and related to own payoffs onl...
We present an experimental study on how people take risk on behalf of others. We use three different...
Abstract: Extensive field evidence shows individuals ’ decisions in settings involving choice under...
Are people’s risk preferences influenced by the preferences of others they interact with or observe?...
The literature on social preferences provides overwhelming evidence of departures from pure self-int...
This paper presents an experimental study investigating the interplay of individuals’ other-regardin...
The paper examines in the laboratory how risk-taking situations are affected by the conditions of ob...
We investigate interpersonal risk assessment, that is how individuals use either their own or their ...
People's risky decisions are susceptible to the social context in which they take place. Across thre...
This paper studies the effects of social comparison on risk taking behavior. In our theoretical fram...
We explore how risk preferences affect pro-social behavior in risky environments. We analyze a modif...
Extensive field evidence shows individuals' decisions in settings involving uncertainty depend on th...
Idiosyncratic risk attitudes are usually assumed to be commonly known and related to own payoffs onl...
By means of a laboratory experiment we investigate the role of risk preferences for prosocial behavi...
By means of a laboratory experiment we investigate the role of risk preferences for prosocial behav...
Idiosyncratic risk attitudes are usually assumed to be commonly known and related to own payoffs onl...
We present an experimental study on how people take risk on behalf of others. We use three different...
Abstract: Extensive field evidence shows individuals ’ decisions in settings involving choice under...
Are people’s risk preferences influenced by the preferences of others they interact with or observe?...
The literature on social preferences provides overwhelming evidence of departures from pure self-int...
This paper presents an experimental study investigating the interplay of individuals’ other-regardin...
The paper examines in the laboratory how risk-taking situations are affected by the conditions of ob...
We investigate interpersonal risk assessment, that is how individuals use either their own or their ...
People's risky decisions are susceptible to the social context in which they take place. Across thre...
This paper studies the effects of social comparison on risk taking behavior. In our theoretical fram...
We explore how risk preferences affect pro-social behavior in risky environments. We analyze a modif...
Extensive field evidence shows individuals' decisions in settings involving uncertainty depend on th...
Idiosyncratic risk attitudes are usually assumed to be commonly known and related to own payoffs onl...
By means of a laboratory experiment we investigate the role of risk preferences for prosocial behavi...
By means of a laboratory experiment we investigate the role of risk preferences for prosocial behav...
Idiosyncratic risk attitudes are usually assumed to be commonly known and related to own payoffs onl...
We present an experimental study on how people take risk on behalf of others. We use three different...
Abstract: Extensive field evidence shows individuals ’ decisions in settings involving choice under...