What do we expect of others? Do we expect people to be generous? If so, can we attribute this expected generosity to wishful thinking? Are our expectations, to some extent, related to our personal involvement in the outcome or the size of the stakes? This study investigates expectations on generosity by means of a series of controlled experiments. A total of 205 subjects were recruited and their expectations about the dictator's behavior in the dictator game were elicited. Despite differences in the roles, involvement in the game, the degree of social distance or the variation of stakes, the results are conclusive: subjects seldom predict that dictators will behave selfishly, and the majority of subjects expect that dictators will choose ...
In a monetarily incentivized Dictator Game, we expected Dictators' empathy toward the Recipients to ...
This paper examines possible motives and institutional factors that impact giving. Specifically, I c...
We show that generosity is affected when we vary the level of role uncertainty, i.e., the probabilit...
What do we expect of others? Do we expect people to be generous? If so, can we attribute this expect...
Mechanisms supporting human ultra-cooperativeness are very much subject to debate. One psychological...
Mechanisms supporting human ultra-cooperativeness are very much subject to debate. One psychological...
We report experimental data on expectations about generosity in a dictator game in which dictators f...
Expectations, exerting influence through social norms, are a very strong candidate to explain how co...
Experimental dictator games have been used to explore unselfish behaviour. Evidence is presented her...
We show that generosity is affected when we vary the level of role uncertainty, i.e., the probabilit...
Because perceptions of luck, hard work, and the idea of a “me vs. you” mindset often influence peopl...
Previous experimental literature on reputation studies its effects in environments where they are of...
We conduct a field experiment in a large real-world social network to examine how subjects expect to...
In a monetarily incentivized Dictator Game, we expected Dictators' empathy toward the Recipients to ...
This paper examines possible motives and institutional factors that impact giving. Specifically, I c...
We show that generosity is affected when we vary the level of role uncertainty, i.e., the probabilit...
What do we expect of others? Do we expect people to be generous? If so, can we attribute this expect...
Mechanisms supporting human ultra-cooperativeness are very much subject to debate. One psychological...
Mechanisms supporting human ultra-cooperativeness are very much subject to debate. One psychological...
We report experimental data on expectations about generosity in a dictator game in which dictators f...
Expectations, exerting influence through social norms, are a very strong candidate to explain how co...
Experimental dictator games have been used to explore unselfish behaviour. Evidence is presented her...
We show that generosity is affected when we vary the level of role uncertainty, i.e., the probabilit...
Because perceptions of luck, hard work, and the idea of a “me vs. you” mindset often influence peopl...
Previous experimental literature on reputation studies its effects in environments where they are of...
We conduct a field experiment in a large real-world social network to examine how subjects expect to...
In a monetarily incentivized Dictator Game, we expected Dictators' empathy toward the Recipients to ...
This paper examines possible motives and institutional factors that impact giving. Specifically, I c...
We show that generosity is affected when we vary the level of role uncertainty, i.e., the probabilit...