Do ethical motivations and attitudes affect behaviour? We examine this issue in six Prisoner´s Dilemma and Prisoner´s Dilemma related games using an online experiment where individuals were asked to make choices and subsequently to express the motivations for their choices and their general attitudes. The experimental evidence of 1,701 students suggests that the motivations and attitudes of respondents regarding altruism, inequality aversion, reciprocity and aversion to lying are important for determining economic choices as well as self-interest. Econometric analysis of the choice to share indicates that ethical and self-interested motives are more important for determining choices than personal characteristics
Economics students are more likely than others to act self-interestedly and less likely to behave co...
Research studies and recruitment processes often rely on psychometric instruments to profile respond...
Do economics students behave more selfishly than other students? Experimental game studies suggest s...
There is disagreement amongst economists regarding whether economics students are more self-interest...
Decades of experimental research show that some people forgo personal gains to benefit others in uni...
By applying the behavioural economics approach and the findings of the empirical survey we conducted...
WOS:000256153600006 (Nº de Acesso Web of Science)This article begins by presenting experimental evid...
Research has shown that groups tend to be less cooperative in prisoner\u27s dilemma games compared t...
In traditional economics the decision-making process for individuals has effectively no role for eth...
The research question of this paper is whether it is correct to interpret “prosocial ” decisions rev...
Experimental economics has revealed an underlying tension between preferences for fairness and the p...
Humans sometimes behave very selfishly, yet in other cases they prefer to help others. These “social...
The purpose of this chapter is to describe a menu of experimental games that are useful for measurin...
The present work examines the topics of strategic behavior, empathy and gender differences in respon...
We present a wide collection of experiments which show how human behavior deviates substantially wit...
Economics students are more likely than others to act self-interestedly and less likely to behave co...
Research studies and recruitment processes often rely on psychometric instruments to profile respond...
Do economics students behave more selfishly than other students? Experimental game studies suggest s...
There is disagreement amongst economists regarding whether economics students are more self-interest...
Decades of experimental research show that some people forgo personal gains to benefit others in uni...
By applying the behavioural economics approach and the findings of the empirical survey we conducted...
WOS:000256153600006 (Nº de Acesso Web of Science)This article begins by presenting experimental evid...
Research has shown that groups tend to be less cooperative in prisoner\u27s dilemma games compared t...
In traditional economics the decision-making process for individuals has effectively no role for eth...
The research question of this paper is whether it is correct to interpret “prosocial ” decisions rev...
Experimental economics has revealed an underlying tension between preferences for fairness and the p...
Humans sometimes behave very selfishly, yet in other cases they prefer to help others. These “social...
The purpose of this chapter is to describe a menu of experimental games that are useful for measurin...
The present work examines the topics of strategic behavior, empathy and gender differences in respon...
We present a wide collection of experiments which show how human behavior deviates substantially wit...
Economics students are more likely than others to act self-interestedly and less likely to behave co...
Research studies and recruitment processes often rely on psychometric instruments to profile respond...
Do economics students behave more selfishly than other students? Experimental game studies suggest s...