In the ultimatum game, the challenge is to explain why responders reject non-zero offers thereby defying classical rationality. Fairness and related notions have been the main explanations so far. We explain this rejection behavior via the following principle: if the responder regrets less about losing the offer than the proposer regrets not offering the best option, the offer is rejected. This principle qualifies as a rational punishing behavior and it replaces the experimentally falsified classical rationality (the subgame perfect Nash equilibrium) that leads to accepting any non-zero offer. The principle is implemented via the transitive regret theory for probabilistic lotteries. The expected utility implementation is a limiting case of ...
Non-cooperative game theory predicts that Allocators in Ultimatum games will take almost all the &ap...
This paper reports data from an ultimatum mini-game in which responders first had to choose whether ...
We demonstrate that one should not expect convergence of the proposals to the subgame perfect Nash e...
A central issue in behavioral economics is the role of fairness, and whether it is hard-wired or acq...
The Ultimatum Game (UG) is an economic game where two players (proposer and responder) decide how to...
Being treated fairly by others is an important need in everyday life. Experimentally, fairness can b...
The Ultimatum Game examines the relationship between profit maximization and fairness in our decisio...
Behavior in the Ultimatum Game has been well-studied experimentally, and provides a marked contrast ...
<div><p>Behavior in the Ultimatum Game has been well-studied experimentally, and provides a marked c...
Behavior in the Ultimatum Game has been well-studied experimentally, and provides a marked contrast ...
Experiments on the Ultimatum Game (UG) repeatedly show that people''s behaviour is far from rational...
In the Ultimatum Game, two players are offered a chance to win a certain sum of money. All they must...
In the Ultimatum Game, two players are offered a chance to win a certain sum of money. All they must...
I wish to thank my students in Econ 411 at the American University in Cairo, for planning, organisi...
This paper shows that identical offers in an ultimatum game generate systematically different reject...
Non-cooperative game theory predicts that Allocators in Ultimatum games will take almost all the &ap...
This paper reports data from an ultimatum mini-game in which responders first had to choose whether ...
We demonstrate that one should not expect convergence of the proposals to the subgame perfect Nash e...
A central issue in behavioral economics is the role of fairness, and whether it is hard-wired or acq...
The Ultimatum Game (UG) is an economic game where two players (proposer and responder) decide how to...
Being treated fairly by others is an important need in everyday life. Experimentally, fairness can b...
The Ultimatum Game examines the relationship between profit maximization and fairness in our decisio...
Behavior in the Ultimatum Game has been well-studied experimentally, and provides a marked contrast ...
<div><p>Behavior in the Ultimatum Game has been well-studied experimentally, and provides a marked c...
Behavior in the Ultimatum Game has been well-studied experimentally, and provides a marked contrast ...
Experiments on the Ultimatum Game (UG) repeatedly show that people''s behaviour is far from rational...
In the Ultimatum Game, two players are offered a chance to win a certain sum of money. All they must...
In the Ultimatum Game, two players are offered a chance to win a certain sum of money. All they must...
I wish to thank my students in Econ 411 at the American University in Cairo, for planning, organisi...
This paper shows that identical offers in an ultimatum game generate systematically different reject...
Non-cooperative game theory predicts that Allocators in Ultimatum games will take almost all the &ap...
This paper reports data from an ultimatum mini-game in which responders first had to choose whether ...
We demonstrate that one should not expect convergence of the proposals to the subgame perfect Nash e...