This paper investigates the effects of motivations on the perceived kindness of an action within the context of strong social indirect reci- procity. We test experimentally the hypothesis that, for a given dis- tributional outcome, an action is perceived by a third party to be less kind if it can be strategically motivated. The results do not support this hypothesis: social indirect reciprocity is indeed found to be signif- icantly stronger when strategic motivations cannot be ruled out. We interpret these findings as an indication of the role played by team reasoning in explaining reciprocal behavior.Indirect Reciprocity, Motivations, Social Preferences, Laboratory Experiments
Cooperation is a fundamental human trait but our understanding of how it functions remains incomplet...
Indirect reciprocity is an evolutionary theory of altruism and cooperation in social dilemmas. Its e...
Indirect reciprocity involves cooperative acts towards strangers, either in response to their kindne...
One of the key issues for understanding reciprocity is how agents evaluate the kindness of an action...
We study indirect reciprocity and strategic reputation building in an experimental helping game. At ...
This paper highlights a new social motivation, the indirect reciprocity, through a three-player dict...
One of the key issues for understanding reciprocity is how agents evaluate the kindness of an action...
This study investigates the effect of reciprocal kindness on individual decisions with experimental ...
Indirect reciprocity – the notion that third-party observers offer rewards to prosocial actors – is ...
Indirect reciprocity is a mechanism for the evolution of cooperation based on social norms. This mec...
Reciprocal behavioral has been found to play a significant role in many economic domains, including ...
Direct and indirect reciprocity are two fundamental mechanisms that promote prosocial behavior withi...
<div><p>Indirect reciprocity involves cooperative acts towards strangers, either in response to thei...
Some of the greatest human achievements are difficult to imagine without prosociality. This article ...
Cooperation is a fundamental human trait but our understanding of how it functions remains incomplet...
Indirect reciprocity is an evolutionary theory of altruism and cooperation in social dilemmas. Its e...
Indirect reciprocity involves cooperative acts towards strangers, either in response to their kindne...
One of the key issues for understanding reciprocity is how agents evaluate the kindness of an action...
We study indirect reciprocity and strategic reputation building in an experimental helping game. At ...
This paper highlights a new social motivation, the indirect reciprocity, through a three-player dict...
One of the key issues for understanding reciprocity is how agents evaluate the kindness of an action...
This study investigates the effect of reciprocal kindness on individual decisions with experimental ...
Indirect reciprocity – the notion that third-party observers offer rewards to prosocial actors – is ...
Indirect reciprocity is a mechanism for the evolution of cooperation based on social norms. This mec...
Reciprocal behavioral has been found to play a significant role in many economic domains, including ...
Direct and indirect reciprocity are two fundamental mechanisms that promote prosocial behavior withi...
<div><p>Indirect reciprocity involves cooperative acts towards strangers, either in response to thei...
Some of the greatest human achievements are difficult to imagine without prosociality. This article ...
Cooperation is a fundamental human trait but our understanding of how it functions remains incomplet...
Indirect reciprocity is an evolutionary theory of altruism and cooperation in social dilemmas. Its e...
Indirect reciprocity involves cooperative acts towards strangers, either in response to their kindne...