We investigate the motives for cooperation in the one-shot Prisoner’s Dilemma (PD). A prior study finds that cooperation rates in one-shot PD games can be ranked empirically by the social surplus from cooperation. That study employs symmetric payoffs from cooperation in simultaneous PD games. Hence, in that setting, it is not possible to discern the motives for cooperation since three prominent social welfare criteria, social surplus (efficiency) preferences, Rawlsian maximin preferences, and inequity aversion make the same predictions. In the present paper, we conduct an experiment to identify which of these social preferences best explains differences in cooperation rates and to study the effects of the risk of non-cooperation
The authors analyzed the factors that can influence cooperativeness. Altogether 102 participants wer...
In this paper we examine the question of wether a collective activity can influence cooperation in a...
We examine cooperative behavior when large sums of money are at stake, using data from the televisio...
Recent work highlights that cooperation in the one-shot Prisoner's dilemma (PD) is primarily driven ...
Abstract: We provide perhaps the first clean evidence on how cooperation rates vary across payoff pa...
Both in the field and in the lab, participants frequently cooperate, despite the fact that the situa...
The fact that people frequently cooperate in the single-trial Prisoner’s Dilemma (PD) game indicates...
In the standard one-shot Prisoner’s Dilemma game, participants often choose to cooperate, when the o...
We use a laboratory experiment to examine the role of social preferences in simple one-shot social d...
This paper reports the results of a meta-study of 96 prisoner's dilemma studies comprising more than...
Factors affecting cooperation are rarely studied in the context of the 1-shot prisoner???s dilemma (...
This paper studies the possibility of cooperation based on players' preferences. Consider the follow...
Explaining cooperation in social dilemmas is a central issue in behavioral science, and the prisoner...
11 pages, 5 figures.-- ArXiv pre-print available at: http://arxiv.org/abs/0707.2587Final publisher v...
We analyze a large-stakes prisoner's dilemma game played on a TV show. Players cooperate 40% of the ...
The authors analyzed the factors that can influence cooperativeness. Altogether 102 participants wer...
In this paper we examine the question of wether a collective activity can influence cooperation in a...
We examine cooperative behavior when large sums of money are at stake, using data from the televisio...
Recent work highlights that cooperation in the one-shot Prisoner's dilemma (PD) is primarily driven ...
Abstract: We provide perhaps the first clean evidence on how cooperation rates vary across payoff pa...
Both in the field and in the lab, participants frequently cooperate, despite the fact that the situa...
The fact that people frequently cooperate in the single-trial Prisoner’s Dilemma (PD) game indicates...
In the standard one-shot Prisoner’s Dilemma game, participants often choose to cooperate, when the o...
We use a laboratory experiment to examine the role of social preferences in simple one-shot social d...
This paper reports the results of a meta-study of 96 prisoner's dilemma studies comprising more than...
Factors affecting cooperation are rarely studied in the context of the 1-shot prisoner???s dilemma (...
This paper studies the possibility of cooperation based on players' preferences. Consider the follow...
Explaining cooperation in social dilemmas is a central issue in behavioral science, and the prisoner...
11 pages, 5 figures.-- ArXiv pre-print available at: http://arxiv.org/abs/0707.2587Final publisher v...
We analyze a large-stakes prisoner's dilemma game played on a TV show. Players cooperate 40% of the ...
The authors analyzed the factors that can influence cooperativeness. Altogether 102 participants wer...
In this paper we examine the question of wether a collective activity can influence cooperation in a...
We examine cooperative behavior when large sums of money are at stake, using data from the televisio...