Dictator giving games often demonstrate that nonverbal social cues, such as drawn-in eyes on display, induce pro-social behavior in the form of giving more. Notably, sometimes this effect is seen to differ between males and females. However, the effects of social cues on negative behavior along with its gender dimension have not been studied in a controlled setting. We investigate this with a dictator taking game with and without an eye-image involving a gender balanced subject pool. We find that the eye-image affects the taking behavior of the males and females very differently. Males take significantly less, and females take significantly more in the presence of the eye-image, compared to a baseline. The two groups’ opposing effects cance...
Meta-analysis techniques are used to analyse behaviour in a set of 136 experimental dictator game co...
Giving to others is individually costly, yet generates benefits to the recipient. Such altruistic be...
Some authors propose that gender norms pose divergent effects on generosity, usually being women the...
This paper reports results of an incentivized laboratory experiment manipulating an extremely weak s...
We run between-subject dictator games with exogenously specified “give” or “take” frames involving a...
We run between-subject dictator games with exogenously specified “give” or “take” frames involving a...
Research on altruistic behaviour and associated anticipatory beliefs, as well as related gender diff...
In our experimental study, we investigated whether cues of being watched positively affect prosocial...
This study attempts to replicate experimental results from Chowdhury et al. published in SouthernEco...
We run between-subject dictator games with exogenously specified “give” or “take” frames involving a...
We show that social context matters in gender-paired dictator decisions. Our experiment investigates...
Employing a two-by-two factorial design that manipulates whether dictator groups are single or mixed...
There are many papers using dictator game framework, but only few of them focus on exploring the dif...
Employing a two-by-two factorial design that manipulates whether dictator groups are single or mixed...
To reduce the cognitive experimenter demand effect we embed a dictator game in a more complex decisi...
Meta-analysis techniques are used to analyse behaviour in a set of 136 experimental dictator game co...
Giving to others is individually costly, yet generates benefits to the recipient. Such altruistic be...
Some authors propose that gender norms pose divergent effects on generosity, usually being women the...
This paper reports results of an incentivized laboratory experiment manipulating an extremely weak s...
We run between-subject dictator games with exogenously specified “give” or “take” frames involving a...
We run between-subject dictator games with exogenously specified “give” or “take” frames involving a...
Research on altruistic behaviour and associated anticipatory beliefs, as well as related gender diff...
In our experimental study, we investigated whether cues of being watched positively affect prosocial...
This study attempts to replicate experimental results from Chowdhury et al. published in SouthernEco...
We run between-subject dictator games with exogenously specified “give” or “take” frames involving a...
We show that social context matters in gender-paired dictator decisions. Our experiment investigates...
Employing a two-by-two factorial design that manipulates whether dictator groups are single or mixed...
There are many papers using dictator game framework, but only few of them focus on exploring the dif...
Employing a two-by-two factorial design that manipulates whether dictator groups are single or mixed...
To reduce the cognitive experimenter demand effect we embed a dictator game in a more complex decisi...
Meta-analysis techniques are used to analyse behaviour in a set of 136 experimental dictator game co...
Giving to others is individually costly, yet generates benefits to the recipient. Such altruistic be...
Some authors propose that gender norms pose divergent effects on generosity, usually being women the...