Human flourishing depends on individuals paying costs to contribute to the common good, but such arrangements are vulnerable to free riding, in which individuals benefit from others' contributions without paying costs themselves. Systems of tracking and sanctioning free riders can stabilize cooperation, but the origin of such tendencies is not well understood. Here, we provide evidence that children as young as 4 years old negatively evaluate and sanction free riders. Across six studies, we showed that these tendencies are robust, large in magnitude, tuned to intentional rather than unintentional noncontribution, and generally consistent across third- and first-party cases. Further, these effects cannot be accounted for by factors that freq...
Strong reciprocity explains prosocial cooperation by the presence of individuals who incur costs to ...
Free riders can exploit and therefore subvert joint enterprises. Empirical and theoretical research ...
Is the motivation to free-ride based mainly on naked cost-benefit considerations? Can psychological ...
Human flourishing depends on individuals paying costs to contribute to the common good, but such arr...
Despite the benefits of cooperation, selfish individuals often produce outcomes where everyone is wo...
This paper provides evidence that free riders are heavily punished even if punishment is costly and ...
Much of human cooperation remains an evolutionary riddle. Unlike other animals, people frequently co...
Cooperative behaviors within a group face the risk of being exploited by `free-riders,' individuals ...
Cooperative behaviors within a group face the risk of being exploited by `free-riders,' individuals ...
Recently economists have become interested in why people who face social dilemmas in the experimenta...
The well-known free-rider hypothesis is examined experimentally to see (i) whether individuals behav...
Many people contribute to public goods but stop doing so once they experience free riding. We test t...
Current literature views the punishment of free-riders as an under-supplied public good, carried out...
Strong reciprocity explains prosocial cooperation by the presence of individuals who incur costs to ...
Current literature views the punishment of free-riders as an under-supplied public good, carried out...
Strong reciprocity explains prosocial cooperation by the presence of individuals who incur costs to ...
Free riders can exploit and therefore subvert joint enterprises. Empirical and theoretical research ...
Is the motivation to free-ride based mainly on naked cost-benefit considerations? Can psychological ...
Human flourishing depends on individuals paying costs to contribute to the common good, but such arr...
Despite the benefits of cooperation, selfish individuals often produce outcomes where everyone is wo...
This paper provides evidence that free riders are heavily punished even if punishment is costly and ...
Much of human cooperation remains an evolutionary riddle. Unlike other animals, people frequently co...
Cooperative behaviors within a group face the risk of being exploited by `free-riders,' individuals ...
Cooperative behaviors within a group face the risk of being exploited by `free-riders,' individuals ...
Recently economists have become interested in why people who face social dilemmas in the experimenta...
The well-known free-rider hypothesis is examined experimentally to see (i) whether individuals behav...
Many people contribute to public goods but stop doing so once they experience free riding. We test t...
Current literature views the punishment of free-riders as an under-supplied public good, carried out...
Strong reciprocity explains prosocial cooperation by the presence of individuals who incur costs to ...
Current literature views the punishment of free-riders as an under-supplied public good, carried out...
Strong reciprocity explains prosocial cooperation by the presence of individuals who incur costs to ...
Free riders can exploit and therefore subvert joint enterprises. Empirical and theoretical research ...
Is the motivation to free-ride based mainly on naked cost-benefit considerations? Can psychological ...