A number of studies have shown that peer punishment can sustain cooperation in public good games. This paper shows that the format used to give subjects feedback is critical for the efficacy of punishment. Providing subjects with information about the earnings of their peers leads to significantly less cooperation and lower efficiency compared to a treatment in which subjects receive information about the contributions of their peers. This is despite the fact that the feedback format does not affect incentives. The data suggest that this happens because the feedback format acts as a coordination device which influences the contribution standards that groups establish.Feedback format Peer punishment Public good game Altruistic punishment Coo...
In the context of repeated public good contribution games, we experimentally investigate the impact ...
A laboratory experiment where human subjects play a repeated public goods game with high-powered pun...
Humans often cooperate, voluntarily paying an individual cost to supply a benefit to others. Public ...
In dealing with peer punishment as a cooperation enforcement device, laboratory studies have typical...
We report data from public goods games showing that privately-implemented punishment reduces coopera...
International audienceGiven robust evidence demonstrating the effectiveness of peer sanctioning mech...
none2siIn this paper we study the effects of providing additional feedback about individual contribu...
In this paper we study the effects of providing additional feedback about individual contributions a...
This paper explores whether public or private third-party punishment is more effective in promoting ...
We experimentally study the role of punishment for cooperation in dynamic public-good problems where...
A laboratory experiment designed to investigate the role of relative performance-based payoffs on co...
International audienceExperimental studies of social dilemmas have shown that while the existence of...
We analyze the effects of limited feedback on beliefs and contributions in a repeated public goods g...
We use a public good experiment to study how in-group cooperation is affected by payoff-irrelevant i...
In this experimental study we analyse three collective and one individual punishment rule in a publi...
In the context of repeated public good contribution games, we experimentally investigate the impact ...
A laboratory experiment where human subjects play a repeated public goods game with high-powered pun...
Humans often cooperate, voluntarily paying an individual cost to supply a benefit to others. Public ...
In dealing with peer punishment as a cooperation enforcement device, laboratory studies have typical...
We report data from public goods games showing that privately-implemented punishment reduces coopera...
International audienceGiven robust evidence demonstrating the effectiveness of peer sanctioning mech...
none2siIn this paper we study the effects of providing additional feedback about individual contribu...
In this paper we study the effects of providing additional feedback about individual contributions a...
This paper explores whether public or private third-party punishment is more effective in promoting ...
We experimentally study the role of punishment for cooperation in dynamic public-good problems where...
A laboratory experiment designed to investigate the role of relative performance-based payoffs on co...
International audienceExperimental studies of social dilemmas have shown that while the existence of...
We analyze the effects of limited feedback on beliefs and contributions in a repeated public goods g...
We use a public good experiment to study how in-group cooperation is affected by payoff-irrelevant i...
In this experimental study we analyse three collective and one individual punishment rule in a publi...
In the context of repeated public good contribution games, we experimentally investigate the impact ...
A laboratory experiment where human subjects play a repeated public goods game with high-powered pun...
Humans often cooperate, voluntarily paying an individual cost to supply a benefit to others. Public ...