The seemingly rampant economic selfishness suggested by many recent corporate scandals is at odds with empirical results from behavioural economics, which demonstrate high levels of prosocial behaviour in bilateral interactions and low levels of dishonest behaviour. We design an experimental setting, the ‘Big Robber’ game, where a ‘robber’ can obtain a large personal gain by appropriating the earnings of a large group of ‘victims’. In a large laboratory experiment (N = 640), more than half of all robbers took as much as possible and almost nobody declined to rob. However, the same participants simultaneously displayed standard, predominantly prosocial behaviour in Dictator, Ultimatum and Trust games. Thus, we provide direct empirical eviden...
It has become an accepted paradigm that humans have "prosocial preferences" that lead to higher leve...
Objective. One of the most common tools for studying prosociality is the dictator game, in which all...
Contrary to predictions from Expected Utility Theory and Game Theory, when making economic decisions...
The seemingly rampant economic selfishness suggested by many recent corporate scandals is at odds wi...
We present a novel design measuring a correlate of social preferences in a high-stakes setting. In t...
Experimental research in behavioral economics has revealed a high degree of prosocial tendencies in ...
The results of numerous economic games suggest that humans behave more cooperatively than would be e...
Does giving behavior in economic games reflect true prosocial preferences or is it due to confusion?...
Recent research has highlighted the role of prosocial personality traits-agreeableness and honesty-h...
Recent research has highlighted the role of prosocial personality traits—agreeableness and honesty-h...
Peer-punishment is an important determinant of cooperation in human groups. It has been suggested th...
Peer-punishment is an important determinant of cooperation in human groups. It has been suggested th...
We investigate the motives behind reciprocal behavior by making selfish acts anonymous but not commo...
What determines people's moral judgments of selfish behaviors? Here we study whether people's normat...
Mechanisms supporting human ultra-cooperativeness are very much subject to debate. One psychological...
It has become an accepted paradigm that humans have "prosocial preferences" that lead to higher leve...
Objective. One of the most common tools for studying prosociality is the dictator game, in which all...
Contrary to predictions from Expected Utility Theory and Game Theory, when making economic decisions...
The seemingly rampant economic selfishness suggested by many recent corporate scandals is at odds wi...
We present a novel design measuring a correlate of social preferences in a high-stakes setting. In t...
Experimental research in behavioral economics has revealed a high degree of prosocial tendencies in ...
The results of numerous economic games suggest that humans behave more cooperatively than would be e...
Does giving behavior in economic games reflect true prosocial preferences or is it due to confusion?...
Recent research has highlighted the role of prosocial personality traits-agreeableness and honesty-h...
Recent research has highlighted the role of prosocial personality traits—agreeableness and honesty-h...
Peer-punishment is an important determinant of cooperation in human groups. It has been suggested th...
Peer-punishment is an important determinant of cooperation in human groups. It has been suggested th...
We investigate the motives behind reciprocal behavior by making selfish acts anonymous but not commo...
What determines people's moral judgments of selfish behaviors? Here we study whether people's normat...
Mechanisms supporting human ultra-cooperativeness are very much subject to debate. One psychological...
It has become an accepted paradigm that humans have "prosocial preferences" that lead to higher leve...
Objective. One of the most common tools for studying prosociality is the dictator game, in which all...
Contrary to predictions from Expected Utility Theory and Game Theory, when making economic decisions...