The literature exploring other regarding behavior sheds important light on interesting social phenomena, yet less attention has been given to how the received results speak to foundational assumptions within economics. Our study synthesizes the empirical evidence, showing that recent work challenges convex preference theory but is largely consistent with rational choice theory. Guided by this understanding, we design a new, more demanding test of a central tenet of economics—the contraction axiom—within a sharing framework. Making use of more than 325 dictators participating in a series of allocation games, we show that sharing choices violate the contraction axiom. We advance a new theory that augments standard models with moral reference ...
Experimental implementations of dictator games are found to differ in terms of their underlying stra...
We report a laboratory experiment that enables us to distinguish preferences for altruism (concernin...
Why do people give when asked, but prefer not to be asked, and even take when possible? We show that...
The literature exploring other regarding behavior sheds important light on interesting social phenom...
The literature exploring other-regarding behavior uncovers interesting phenomena, yet the extent the...
The literature exploring other-regarding behavior uncovers interesting phenomena, yet the extent the...
Literature exploring other-regarding behavior reveals interesting phenomena, yet less attention has ...
The literature exploring other-regarding behavior uncovers interesting phenomena, yet the extent the...
We present a wide collection of experiments which show how human behavior deviates substantially wit...
While many experiments demonstrate that the actual behavior is different than predicted behavior, th...
This paper reviews a series of paradoxes that exist in the experimental economics literature. These ...
This paper reviews a series of paradoxes that exist in the experimental economics literature. These ...
This paper reviews a series of paradoxes that exist in the experimental economics literature. These ...
Decades of experimental research show that some people forgo personal gains to benefit others in uni...
Experimental implementations of dictator games are found to differ in terms of their underlying stra...
Experimental implementations of dictator games are found to differ in terms of their underlying stra...
We report a laboratory experiment that enables us to distinguish preferences for altruism (concernin...
Why do people give when asked, but prefer not to be asked, and even take when possible? We show that...
The literature exploring other regarding behavior sheds important light on interesting social phenom...
The literature exploring other-regarding behavior uncovers interesting phenomena, yet the extent the...
The literature exploring other-regarding behavior uncovers interesting phenomena, yet the extent the...
Literature exploring other-regarding behavior reveals interesting phenomena, yet less attention has ...
The literature exploring other-regarding behavior uncovers interesting phenomena, yet the extent the...
We present a wide collection of experiments which show how human behavior deviates substantially wit...
While many experiments demonstrate that the actual behavior is different than predicted behavior, th...
This paper reviews a series of paradoxes that exist in the experimental economics literature. These ...
This paper reviews a series of paradoxes that exist in the experimental economics literature. These ...
This paper reviews a series of paradoxes that exist in the experimental economics literature. These ...
Decades of experimental research show that some people forgo personal gains to benefit others in uni...
Experimental implementations of dictator games are found to differ in terms of their underlying stra...
Experimental implementations of dictator games are found to differ in terms of their underlying stra...
We report a laboratory experiment that enables us to distinguish preferences for altruism (concernin...
Why do people give when asked, but prefer not to be asked, and even take when possible? We show that...