Decision-makers are sometimes influenced by the way in which choice situations are presented to them or "framed" This can be seen as an important challenge to the social sciences, since strong and pervasive framing effects would make it difficult to study human behavior in a synthetic or theoretic manner. We present results from experiments with dilemma games designed to shed light on the effects of several frame variations. We study, among others, the particular public bad frame used by Andreoni (1995) and two more naturalistic frames involving stories. Our results show that none of the frame manipulations have a significant effect on average behavior, but we do find some effects on extreme behavior. We also find that incentives do matter ...
We study label framing effects in linear public goods games. By accounting for heterogeneous frame c...
We use a unified framework to model rent-seeking (Tullock) contests and games of strategic complemen...
Background: Decisions made on behalf of other people are sometimes more rational than those made for...
Decision-makers are sometimes influenced by the way in which choice situations are presented to them...
Abstract: Decision-makers are sometimes influenced by the way in which choice situations are present...
Many previous experiments document that behavior in multi-person settings responds to the name of th...
Small changes in the framing of games (i.e., the way in which the game situation is described to par...
Context frames such as describing a Prisoner's Dilemma as a “community” or a “stock exchange” game c...
International audienceWe present a new experimental evidence of how framing affects decisions in the...
We study framing effects in repeated social dilemmas by comparing payoff-equivalent Give- and Take-f...
A strong cooperative culture, where individuals contribute to social causes and refrain from selfish...
Earlier studies have found that a substantial part of the contributions in public good games can be ...
Psychological game theory can provide a rational choice explanation of framing effects; frames influ...
Past experiments show systematic differences in contributions to public goods under various framing ...
Background: Decisions made on behalf of other people are sometimes more rational than those made for...
We study label framing effects in linear public goods games. By accounting for heterogeneous frame c...
We use a unified framework to model rent-seeking (Tullock) contests and games of strategic complemen...
Background: Decisions made on behalf of other people are sometimes more rational than those made for...
Decision-makers are sometimes influenced by the way in which choice situations are presented to them...
Abstract: Decision-makers are sometimes influenced by the way in which choice situations are present...
Many previous experiments document that behavior in multi-person settings responds to the name of th...
Small changes in the framing of games (i.e., the way in which the game situation is described to par...
Context frames such as describing a Prisoner's Dilemma as a “community” or a “stock exchange” game c...
International audienceWe present a new experimental evidence of how framing affects decisions in the...
We study framing effects in repeated social dilemmas by comparing payoff-equivalent Give- and Take-f...
A strong cooperative culture, where individuals contribute to social causes and refrain from selfish...
Earlier studies have found that a substantial part of the contributions in public good games can be ...
Psychological game theory can provide a rational choice explanation of framing effects; frames influ...
Past experiments show systematic differences in contributions to public goods under various framing ...
Background: Decisions made on behalf of other people are sometimes more rational than those made for...
We study label framing effects in linear public goods games. By accounting for heterogeneous frame c...
We use a unified framework to model rent-seeking (Tullock) contests and games of strategic complemen...
Background: Decisions made on behalf of other people are sometimes more rational than those made for...