In a circular neighborhood, each member has a left and a right neighbor with whom(s) he interacts repeatedly. From their two separate endowment amounts individuals can contribute to each of their two structurally independent public goods, either shared only with their left, respectively right, neighbor. If most group members are discrimination averse and conditionally cooperating with their neighbors, this implies intra- as well as inter-personal spillovers which link all neighbors. Investigating individual adaptations in one’s two games with differing free-riding incentives confirms, through behavioral spillovers, that both individual contributions anchor on the local public good with the smaller free-riding incentive. Therefore asymmetry ...
In a circular neighborhood of eight, each member contributes repeatedly to two local public goods, o...
What makes people cooperate? How can one design mechanisms in order to incentivize players to contri...
In a circular neighborhood of eight, each member contributes repeatedly to two local public goods, o...
In a circular neighborhood, each member has a left and a right neighbor with whom(s) he interacts re...
In a circular neighborhood, each member has a left and a right neighbor with whom(s) he interacts re...
In a circular neighborhood, each member has a left and a right neighbor with whom(s) he interacts re...
This article examines the nature of human behavior in a nested social dilemma referred to as the Spi...
This article presents an analysis of the output and welfare effects of different patterns of behavio...
Numerous empirical studies show that when people play social dilemma games in the laboratory they of...
We provide a direct test of the role of social preferences in voluntary cooperation. We elicit indiv...
Institutions are an important means for fostering prosocial behaviors, but in many contexts their sc...
In a local interaction model agents play bilateral prisoners’ dilemmas with their immediate neighbor...
Most previous investigations on spatial Public Goods Game assume that individuals treat neighbors eq...
In a circular neighborhood of eight, each member contributes repeatedly to two local public goods, o...
What makes people cooperate? How can one design mechanisms in order to incentivize players to contri...
In a circular neighborhood of eight, each member contributes repeatedly to two local public goods, o...
In a circular neighborhood, each member has a left and a right neighbor with whom(s) he interacts re...
In a circular neighborhood, each member has a left and a right neighbor with whom(s) he interacts re...
In a circular neighborhood, each member has a left and a right neighbor with whom(s) he interacts re...
This article examines the nature of human behavior in a nested social dilemma referred to as the Spi...
This article presents an analysis of the output and welfare effects of different patterns of behavio...
Numerous empirical studies show that when people play social dilemma games in the laboratory they of...
We provide a direct test of the role of social preferences in voluntary cooperation. We elicit indiv...
Institutions are an important means for fostering prosocial behaviors, but in many contexts their sc...
In a local interaction model agents play bilateral prisoners’ dilemmas with their immediate neighbor...
Most previous investigations on spatial Public Goods Game assume that individuals treat neighbors eq...
In a circular neighborhood of eight, each member contributes repeatedly to two local public goods, o...
What makes people cooperate? How can one design mechanisms in order to incentivize players to contri...
In a circular neighborhood of eight, each member contributes repeatedly to two local public goods, o...