"In social decision making, punishing non-cooperation and rewarding cooperation may not only affect cooperation because of instrumental reasons. They may also evoke moral concerns regarding cooperation as they signal that cooperation is socially approved of and non-cooperation socially disapproved of. I argue that punishments do this to a greater extent than rewards as punishments communicate an obligatory rule and rewards communicate a voluntary rule. Indeed, the first experiment shows that, in a social dilemma, the concept of punishment increased cooperation and the concept of a reward did not. The second experiment showed that participants showed more disapproval towards an offender when there was a punishment for non-compliance than whe...
Explaining cooperation in groups remains a key problem because reciprocity breaks down between more ...
Punishment promotes contributions to public goods, but recent evidence suggests that its effectivene...
Why did punishment and the use of reputation evolve in humans? According to one family of theories, ...
"In social decision making, punishing non-cooperation and rewarding cooperation may not only affect ...
How effective are rewards (for cooperation) and punishment (for noncooperation) as tools to promote ...
How effective are rewards (for cooperation) and punishment (for noncooperation) as tools to promote ...
How effective are rewards (for cooperation) and punishment (for noncooperation) as tools to promote ...
How effective are rewards (for cooperation) and punishment (for noncooperation) as tools to promote ...
To promote cooperation, people often rely on the administration of sanctions. However, from previous...
Cooperation among nonrelatives can be puzzling because cooperation often involves incurring costs to...
Recent work shows that both reward and punishment systems increase short-term cooperation in social ...
Recent work shows that both reward and punishment systems increase short-term cooperation in social ...
Peer-punishment is an important determinant of cooperation in human groups. It has been suggested th...
It is not fully understood how cooperation emerges in a population of individuals with no connection...
Peer-punishment is an important determinant of cooperation in human groups. It has been suggested th...
Explaining cooperation in groups remains a key problem because reciprocity breaks down between more ...
Punishment promotes contributions to public goods, but recent evidence suggests that its effectivene...
Why did punishment and the use of reputation evolve in humans? According to one family of theories, ...
"In social decision making, punishing non-cooperation and rewarding cooperation may not only affect ...
How effective are rewards (for cooperation) and punishment (for noncooperation) as tools to promote ...
How effective are rewards (for cooperation) and punishment (for noncooperation) as tools to promote ...
How effective are rewards (for cooperation) and punishment (for noncooperation) as tools to promote ...
How effective are rewards (for cooperation) and punishment (for noncooperation) as tools to promote ...
To promote cooperation, people often rely on the administration of sanctions. However, from previous...
Cooperation among nonrelatives can be puzzling because cooperation often involves incurring costs to...
Recent work shows that both reward and punishment systems increase short-term cooperation in social ...
Recent work shows that both reward and punishment systems increase short-term cooperation in social ...
Peer-punishment is an important determinant of cooperation in human groups. It has been suggested th...
It is not fully understood how cooperation emerges in a population of individuals with no connection...
Peer-punishment is an important determinant of cooperation in human groups. It has been suggested th...
Explaining cooperation in groups remains a key problem because reciprocity breaks down between more ...
Punishment promotes contributions to public goods, but recent evidence suggests that its effectivene...
Why did punishment and the use of reputation evolve in humans? According to one family of theories, ...