Being treated fairly by others is an important need in everyday life. Experimentally, fairness can be studied using the Ultimatum Game, where the decision to reject a low, but non-zero offer is seen as a way to punish the other player for an unacceptable offer. The canonical explanation of such behavior is inequity aversion: people prefer equal outcomes over personal gains. However, there is abundant evidence that people's decision to reject a low offer can be changed by contextual factors and their emotional state, which cannot be explained by the inequity aversion model. Here, we expand a recent alternative explanation: rejections are driven by deviations from expectations: the larger the difference between the actual offer and the expect...
The accumulation of findings that most responders in the ultimatum game reject unfair offers provide...
<div><p>The accumulation of findings that most responders in the ultimatum game reject unfair offers...
We conducted ultimatum games in which a proposer offers a division of $10 to a respondent, who accep...
Being treated fairly by others is an important need in everyday life. Experimentally, fairness can b...
Being treated fairly by others is an important need in everyday life. Experimentally, fairness can b...
<p>Being treated fairly by others is an important need in everyday life. Experimentally, fairness ca...
A central issue in behavioral economics is the role of fairness, and whether it is hard-wired or acq...
keeping all of the money for themselves to giving all of it away, and any division in between. Once ...
Non-cooperative game theory predicts that Allocators in Ultimatum games will take almost all the &ap...
Negotiating with others about how finite resources should be distributed is an important aspect of h...
Guth, Schmittberger and Schwarze’s (1982) ultimatum game result is replicated with mean earnings of ...
In the ultimatum game, the challenge is to explain why responders reject non-zero offers thereby def...
Item does not contain fulltextPsychological studies have long demonstrated effects of expectations o...
The sensitivity to fairness undergoes relevant changes across development. Whether such changes depe...
This paper analyses the following propositions: (i) Are people generally self-interested; (ii)...
The accumulation of findings that most responders in the ultimatum game reject unfair offers provide...
<div><p>The accumulation of findings that most responders in the ultimatum game reject unfair offers...
We conducted ultimatum games in which a proposer offers a division of $10 to a respondent, who accep...
Being treated fairly by others is an important need in everyday life. Experimentally, fairness can b...
Being treated fairly by others is an important need in everyday life. Experimentally, fairness can b...
<p>Being treated fairly by others is an important need in everyday life. Experimentally, fairness ca...
A central issue in behavioral economics is the role of fairness, and whether it is hard-wired or acq...
keeping all of the money for themselves to giving all of it away, and any division in between. Once ...
Non-cooperative game theory predicts that Allocators in Ultimatum games will take almost all the &ap...
Negotiating with others about how finite resources should be distributed is an important aspect of h...
Guth, Schmittberger and Schwarze’s (1982) ultimatum game result is replicated with mean earnings of ...
In the ultimatum game, the challenge is to explain why responders reject non-zero offers thereby def...
Item does not contain fulltextPsychological studies have long demonstrated effects of expectations o...
The sensitivity to fairness undergoes relevant changes across development. Whether such changes depe...
This paper analyses the following propositions: (i) Are people generally self-interested; (ii)...
The accumulation of findings that most responders in the ultimatum game reject unfair offers provide...
<div><p>The accumulation of findings that most responders in the ultimatum game reject unfair offers...
We conducted ultimatum games in which a proposer offers a division of $10 to a respondent, who accep...