One of the important topics in public choice is how people’s free-riding behavior could differ by group size in collective action dilemmas. This paper experimentally studies how the strength of third party punishment in a prisoner’s dilemma could differ by the number of third parties in a group. Our data indicate that as the number of third party punishers increases in a group, the average punishment intensity per third party punisher decreases. However, the decrease rate is very mild and therefore the size of total punishment in a group substantially increases with an increase in group size. As a result, third party punishment becomes a sufficient deterrent against a player selecting defection in the prisoner’s dilemma when the number of t...
We elicit human conditional punishment types by conducting experiments. We find that their punishmen...
Defence date: 14 September 2018Examining Board: Supervisor Prof. Diego Gambetta, European University...
This paper shows how larger group size can enhance punishing behavior in social dilemmas and hence s...
One of the important topics in public choice is how people’s free-riding behavior could differ by gr...
One of the important topics in public choice is how people’s free-riding behavior could differ by g...
Past research has shown that people often take punitive actions towards norm violators even when the...
This thesis is concerned with a topic in behavioral economics that is a relatively new and fast grow...
This paper presents results from a prisoner’s dilemma game experiment with a third party punisher. T...
This paper investigates how punishment promotes cooperation when the punishment enforcer is a third ...
In this experimental study we analyse three collective and one individual punishment rule in a publi...
We discuss how technologies of peer punishment might bias the results that are observed in experimen...
The effects of stake size on cooperation and punishment are investigated using a public goods experi...
Over-punishment often occurs in anonymous peer-to-peer punishment in public goods game experiments w...
Because punishments are expected to give offenders what they deserve proportionally to the severity ...
This paper deals with the subject of third-party punishment. The paper compares, by means of an econ...
We elicit human conditional punishment types by conducting experiments. We find that their punishmen...
Defence date: 14 September 2018Examining Board: Supervisor Prof. Diego Gambetta, European University...
This paper shows how larger group size can enhance punishing behavior in social dilemmas and hence s...
One of the important topics in public choice is how people’s free-riding behavior could differ by gr...
One of the important topics in public choice is how people’s free-riding behavior could differ by g...
Past research has shown that people often take punitive actions towards norm violators even when the...
This thesis is concerned with a topic in behavioral economics that is a relatively new and fast grow...
This paper presents results from a prisoner’s dilemma game experiment with a third party punisher. T...
This paper investigates how punishment promotes cooperation when the punishment enforcer is a third ...
In this experimental study we analyse three collective and one individual punishment rule in a publi...
We discuss how technologies of peer punishment might bias the results that are observed in experimen...
The effects of stake size on cooperation and punishment are investigated using a public goods experi...
Over-punishment often occurs in anonymous peer-to-peer punishment in public goods game experiments w...
Because punishments are expected to give offenders what they deserve proportionally to the severity ...
This paper deals with the subject of third-party punishment. The paper compares, by means of an econ...
We elicit human conditional punishment types by conducting experiments. We find that their punishmen...
Defence date: 14 September 2018Examining Board: Supervisor Prof. Diego Gambetta, European University...
This paper shows how larger group size can enhance punishing behavior in social dilemmas and hence s...