Recent experimental research has examined whether contributions to public goods can be traced back to intuitive or deliberative decision-making, using response times in public good games in order to identify the specific decision process at work. In light of conflicting results, this paper reports on an analysis of response time data from an online experiment in which over 3400 subjects from the general population decided whether to contribute to a real world public good. The between-subjects evidence confirms a strong positive link between contributing and deliberation and between free-riding and intuition. The average response time of contributors is 40 percent higher than that of free-riders. A within-subject analysis reveals that for a ...
Previous research on public-good games revealed greater contributions by fast decision-makers than b...
There is a substantial literature examining coordination in public goods games. We conducted an expe...
There is a substantial literature examining coordination in public goods games. We conducted an expe...
Social and Behavioral Sciences: 1st Place (The Ohio State University Denman Undergraduate Research F...
Similar to Levati and Neugebauer (2001), a clock is used by which participants can vary their indivi...
Following the notion that organizations often face public good dilemmas when collective action is ne...
Previous research on public-good games revealed greater contributions by fast decision-makers than b...
Response time is increasingly used to shed light on the process by which individualsmake decisions. ...
Dual-process theories classify a fast, automatic “System 1” and a deliberative, controlled “System 2...
Recent experiments suggest that contribution decisions in a public goods game (PGG) are more likely ...
Previous research on public-good games revealed greater contributions by fast decision-makers than b...
In the paper, we discuss the possibilities of alternative provision of public goods using the indivi...
In public good provision situations, individual members of a group have a choice of contributing or...
The public good game is a popular model of cooperation problems. Rational egoism predicts that in fi...
Previous research on public-good games revealed greater contributions by fast decision-makers than b...
There is a substantial literature examining coordination in public goods games. We conducted an expe...
There is a substantial literature examining coordination in public goods games. We conducted an expe...
Social and Behavioral Sciences: 1st Place (The Ohio State University Denman Undergraduate Research F...
Similar to Levati and Neugebauer (2001), a clock is used by which participants can vary their indivi...
Following the notion that organizations often face public good dilemmas when collective action is ne...
Previous research on public-good games revealed greater contributions by fast decision-makers than b...
Response time is increasingly used to shed light on the process by which individualsmake decisions. ...
Dual-process theories classify a fast, automatic “System 1” and a deliberative, controlled “System 2...
Recent experiments suggest that contribution decisions in a public goods game (PGG) are more likely ...
Previous research on public-good games revealed greater contributions by fast decision-makers than b...
In the paper, we discuss the possibilities of alternative provision of public goods using the indivi...
In public good provision situations, individual members of a group have a choice of contributing or...
The public good game is a popular model of cooperation problems. Rational egoism predicts that in fi...
Previous research on public-good games revealed greater contributions by fast decision-makers than b...
There is a substantial literature examining coordination in public goods games. We conducted an expe...
There is a substantial literature examining coordination in public goods games. We conducted an expe...