We use a two-person 3-stage game to investigate whether people choose to punish or reward another player by sacrificing money to increase or decrease the other person's payoff. One player sends a message indicating an intended play, which is either favorable or unfavorable to the other player in the game. After the message, the sender and the receiver play a simultaneous 2x2 game. A deceptive message may be made, in an effort to induce the receiver to make a play favorable to the sender. Our focus is on whether receivers' rates of monetary sacrifice depend on the process and the perceived sender's intention, as is suggested by the literature on deception and procedural satisfaction. Models such as Rabin (1993), Sen (1997), and Charness and ...
A literature in the social sciences proposes that humans can promote cooperation with strangers by s...
Assuming rationality of profit maximising agents, various economic models made specific and testable...
Accountability is present in many types of social relations; for example, the accountability of elec...
We use a two-person 3-stage game to investigate whether people choose to punish or reward another pl...
This paper presents evidence that the willingness to punish an unfair action is sensitive to whether...
We report the results of an experiment in which subjects play three 2 x 2 games for 10 rounds again...
This paper introduces a new task to elicit individual aversion to deceiving, defined as the lowest p...
We experimentally investigate the relationship between (un)kind actions and subsequent deception in ...
We conducted an experiment in which subjects played a sender–receiver game with and without rewardin...
This paper explores the effect of the possibility of third-party intervention on behavior in a varia...
This paper explores the effect of the possibility of third-party intervention on behavior in a varia...
To what extent do people care about the intentions behind an action? What if the intentions can be d...
Recent experimental studies find excessive truth-telling in sender-receiver games. We show that this...
International audienceAn experiment is designed to shed light on how deception works. The experiment...
This paper reports on a laboratory experiment which investigates the impact of institutions and inst...
A literature in the social sciences proposes that humans can promote cooperation with strangers by s...
Assuming rationality of profit maximising agents, various economic models made specific and testable...
Accountability is present in many types of social relations; for example, the accountability of elec...
We use a two-person 3-stage game to investigate whether people choose to punish or reward another pl...
This paper presents evidence that the willingness to punish an unfair action is sensitive to whether...
We report the results of an experiment in which subjects play three 2 x 2 games for 10 rounds again...
This paper introduces a new task to elicit individual aversion to deceiving, defined as the lowest p...
We experimentally investigate the relationship between (un)kind actions and subsequent deception in ...
We conducted an experiment in which subjects played a sender–receiver game with and without rewardin...
This paper explores the effect of the possibility of third-party intervention on behavior in a varia...
This paper explores the effect of the possibility of third-party intervention on behavior in a varia...
To what extent do people care about the intentions behind an action? What if the intentions can be d...
Recent experimental studies find excessive truth-telling in sender-receiver games. We show that this...
International audienceAn experiment is designed to shed light on how deception works. The experiment...
This paper reports on a laboratory experiment which investigates the impact of institutions and inst...
A literature in the social sciences proposes that humans can promote cooperation with strangers by s...
Assuming rationality of profit maximising agents, various economic models made specific and testable...
Accountability is present in many types of social relations; for example, the accountability of elec...