Guilt averse individuals experience a utility loss if they believe they let someone down. In particular, generosity depends on what the donor believes that the recipient expects to receive. In experimental work, several authors have identified a positive correlation between such second-order donor beliefs and generous behavior, as predicted by the guilt aversion hypothesis. However, the correlation could alternatively be due to a “false consensus effect,” i.e., the tendency of people to believe others to think like themselves. In order to test the guilt aversion hypothesis more rigorously, we conduct three separate experiments: a dictator game experiment, a complete information trust game experiment, and a hidden action trust game experimen...
Behavioral economists have come to recognize that reciprocity, the interaction of trust and trustwor...
This paper reports the results of an experiment aimed at investigating the link between empathy, ant...
Mechanisms supporting human ultra-cooperativeness are very much subject to debate. One psychological...
Guilt averse individuals experience a utility loss if they believe they let someone down. In particu...
Guilt averse individuals experience a utility loss if they believe they let someone down. For exampl...
For the trust game, recent models of belief-dependent motivations make opposite predictions regardin...
We analyse two types of belief-dependent models of social prefer-ences: guilt aversion and reciproci...
We compare three approaches to test for guilt aversion in two economic experiments. The first approa...
We run an economic experiment in order to find out the preferences of altruism, envy, and guilt at i...
This study tests guilt aversion by experimentally eliciting guilt sensitivity of villagers in Bangla...
We compare the strategy and direct-response methods in a one-shot trust game with hidden action. In...
The evidence for belief-based guilt aversion is reviewed with a particular focus on trust games and ...
Mechanisms supporting human ultra-cooperativeness are very much subject to debate. One psychological...
We compare three approaches to test for guilt aversion in two economic experiments. The first approa...
We estimate structural models of guilt aversion to measure the population level of willingness to pa...
Behavioral economists have come to recognize that reciprocity, the interaction of trust and trustwor...
This paper reports the results of an experiment aimed at investigating the link between empathy, ant...
Mechanisms supporting human ultra-cooperativeness are very much subject to debate. One psychological...
Guilt averse individuals experience a utility loss if they believe they let someone down. In particu...
Guilt averse individuals experience a utility loss if they believe they let someone down. For exampl...
For the trust game, recent models of belief-dependent motivations make opposite predictions regardin...
We analyse two types of belief-dependent models of social prefer-ences: guilt aversion and reciproci...
We compare three approaches to test for guilt aversion in two economic experiments. The first approa...
We run an economic experiment in order to find out the preferences of altruism, envy, and guilt at i...
This study tests guilt aversion by experimentally eliciting guilt sensitivity of villagers in Bangla...
We compare the strategy and direct-response methods in a one-shot trust game with hidden action. In...
The evidence for belief-based guilt aversion is reviewed with a particular focus on trust games and ...
Mechanisms supporting human ultra-cooperativeness are very much subject to debate. One psychological...
We compare three approaches to test for guilt aversion in two economic experiments. The first approa...
We estimate structural models of guilt aversion to measure the population level of willingness to pa...
Behavioral economists have come to recognize that reciprocity, the interaction of trust and trustwor...
This paper reports the results of an experiment aimed at investigating the link between empathy, ant...
Mechanisms supporting human ultra-cooperativeness are very much subject to debate. One psychological...