We investigate what processes may underlie heterogeneity in social preferences. We address this question by examining participants' decisions and associated response times across 12 mini-ultimatum games. Using a finite mixture model and cross-validating its classification with a response time analysis, we identified four groups of responders: one group takes little to no account of the proposed split or the foregone allocation and swiftly accepts any positive offer; two groups process primarily the objective properties of the allocations (fairness and kindness) and need more time the more properties need to be examined; and a fourth group, which takes more time than the others, appears to take into account what they would have proposed had ...
Social and Behavioral Sciences: 1st Place (The Ohio State University Denman Undergraduate Research F...
We study the evolution of fairness in a multiplayer version of the classical Ultimatum Game in which...
Response time is increasingly used to shed light on the process by which individuals make decisions....
We investigate what processes may underlie heterogeneity in social preferences. We address this ques...
There is ample evidence that people differ considerably in the strength of their social preferences....
International audienceStudies on the intuitive or deliberate nature of human actions often use time ...
There is ample evidence that people differ considerably in their preferences. We identify individual...
We study social preferences in a three-person ultimatum game experiment with one proposer and two re...
This paper studies the response times of experimental subjects playing the Ultimatum game in a labor...
Evolutionary accounts have difficulty explaining why people cooperate with anonymous strangers they ...
This paper studies the response times of experimental subjects playing the Ultimatum game in a labor...
Evolutionary accounts have difficulty explaining why people cooperate with anonymous strangers they ...
This paper aims at showing how analytical techniques can be employed to explain the global emerged b...
We explores the motivations behind costly punishment in social dilemmas, specifically focusing on re...
Contains fulltext : 140289.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)We study social...
Social and Behavioral Sciences: 1st Place (The Ohio State University Denman Undergraduate Research F...
We study the evolution of fairness in a multiplayer version of the classical Ultimatum Game in which...
Response time is increasingly used to shed light on the process by which individuals make decisions....
We investigate what processes may underlie heterogeneity in social preferences. We address this ques...
There is ample evidence that people differ considerably in the strength of their social preferences....
International audienceStudies on the intuitive or deliberate nature of human actions often use time ...
There is ample evidence that people differ considerably in their preferences. We identify individual...
We study social preferences in a three-person ultimatum game experiment with one proposer and two re...
This paper studies the response times of experimental subjects playing the Ultimatum game in a labor...
Evolutionary accounts have difficulty explaining why people cooperate with anonymous strangers they ...
This paper studies the response times of experimental subjects playing the Ultimatum game in a labor...
Evolutionary accounts have difficulty explaining why people cooperate with anonymous strangers they ...
This paper aims at showing how analytical techniques can be employed to explain the global emerged b...
We explores the motivations behind costly punishment in social dilemmas, specifically focusing on re...
Contains fulltext : 140289.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)We study social...
Social and Behavioral Sciences: 1st Place (The Ohio State University Denman Undergraduate Research F...
We study the evolution of fairness in a multiplayer version of the classical Ultimatum Game in which...
Response time is increasingly used to shed light on the process by which individuals make decisions....