The problem of trust is a paradigmatic social dilemma. Previous literature has paid much academic attention on effects of peer punishment and altruistic third-party punishment on trust and human cooperation in dyadic interactions. However, the effects of centralized sanctioning institutions on decentralized reciprocity in hierarchical interactions remain to be further explored. This paper presents a formal two-level trust game with incomplete information which adds an authority as a strategic purposive actor into the traditional trust game. This model allows scholars to examine the problem of trust in more complex game theoretic configurations. The analysis demonstrates how the centralized institutions might change the dynamics of r...
Trust has been considered the "cement" of a society and is much studied in sociology and other socia...
Trust facilitates social interaction. When it exists, it strengthens cooperation, provides the basis...
Pairs of trustors play finitely repeated Trust Games with the same trustee in a laboratory experiment...
The problem of trust is a paradigmatic social dilemma. Previous literature has paid much ac-ademic a...
The problem of trust is a paradigmatic social dilemma. Previous literature has paid much academic at...
Social life offers innumerable instances in which trust relations involve multiple agents. In an exp...
This paper provides theoretical background for some effects of social networks on trust. We study th...
Any trust situation involves a certain amount of risk for trustors that trustees could abuse. In som...
By means of a laboratory experiment, we study the impact of the endogenous adoption of a collective ...
This paper proposes a model based on both direct reciprocity and the use of social network structure...
Corruption is a pervasive phenomenon that affects the quality of institutions, undermines economic g...
We use an original variant of the standard trust game to study the effects of corruption on trust an...
We argue that trust can be incentivised by measures which increase the ability of trusters to protec...
Prinicpal-agent problems can reduce gains from exchange available in long distance trade. One soluti...
-In this paper we present a new methodology which, while allowing for anonymous interaction, it also...
Trust has been considered the "cement" of a society and is much studied in sociology and other socia...
Trust facilitates social interaction. When it exists, it strengthens cooperation, provides the basis...
Pairs of trustors play finitely repeated Trust Games with the same trustee in a laboratory experiment...
The problem of trust is a paradigmatic social dilemma. Previous literature has paid much ac-ademic a...
The problem of trust is a paradigmatic social dilemma. Previous literature has paid much academic at...
Social life offers innumerable instances in which trust relations involve multiple agents. In an exp...
This paper provides theoretical background for some effects of social networks on trust. We study th...
Any trust situation involves a certain amount of risk for trustors that trustees could abuse. In som...
By means of a laboratory experiment, we study the impact of the endogenous adoption of a collective ...
This paper proposes a model based on both direct reciprocity and the use of social network structure...
Corruption is a pervasive phenomenon that affects the quality of institutions, undermines economic g...
We use an original variant of the standard trust game to study the effects of corruption on trust an...
We argue that trust can be incentivised by measures which increase the ability of trusters to protec...
Prinicpal-agent problems can reduce gains from exchange available in long distance trade. One soluti...
-In this paper we present a new methodology which, while allowing for anonymous interaction, it also...
Trust has been considered the "cement" of a society and is much studied in sociology and other socia...
Trust facilitates social interaction. When it exists, it strengthens cooperation, provides the basis...
Pairs of trustors play finitely repeated Trust Games with the same trustee in a laboratory experiment...