PublishedJournal ArticleThis is the final version of the article. Available from SAGE Publications via the DOI in this record.© The Author(s) 2016.''Moralistic'' punishment of free riders can provide a beneficial reputation, but the immediate behavior is costly to the punisher. In Study 1, we investigated whether variation in status would be perceived to offset or mitigate the costs of punishment. One hundred and nineteen participants were presented with a vignette describing a punishment scenario. Participants predicted whether punishment would occur, how successful it would be, and indicated their attitude to the punisher. Participants believed only intervention by a high-status (HS) individual would be successful and that low-status (LS)...
The file attached to this record is the author's version. The Publisher's final version can be fou...
Why did punishment and the use of reputation evolve in humans? According to one family of theories, ...
This paper presents results from a prisoner’s dilemma game experiment with a third party punisher. T...
‘‘Moralistic’’ punishment of free riders can provide a beneficial reputation, but the immediate beha...
“Moralistic” punishment of free riders can provide a beneficial reputation, but the immediate behavi...
Journal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tCopyright: © 2014 Gordon et al.The datasets associat...
The zip file contains the data for the three studies in SPSS (.sav format). The zip folder also incl...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Social Influence...
<div><p>Third party punishment can be evolutionarily stable if there is heterogeneity in the cost of...
In a prior article, we argued that punishment theorists need to take into account the counterintuiti...
Punishment has been proposed as being central to two distinctively human phenomena: cooperation in g...
Do opportunities to punish non-punishers help to stabilize cooperation? Or do opportunities to punis...
Human social interactions are regulated by moral norms that define individual obligations and rights...
<div><p>Why did punishment and the use of reputation evolve in humans? According to one family of th...
Current literature views the punishment of free-riders as an under-supplied public good, carried out...
The file attached to this record is the author's version. The Publisher's final version can be fou...
Why did punishment and the use of reputation evolve in humans? According to one family of theories, ...
This paper presents results from a prisoner’s dilemma game experiment with a third party punisher. T...
‘‘Moralistic’’ punishment of free riders can provide a beneficial reputation, but the immediate beha...
“Moralistic” punishment of free riders can provide a beneficial reputation, but the immediate behavi...
Journal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tCopyright: © 2014 Gordon et al.The datasets associat...
The zip file contains the data for the three studies in SPSS (.sav format). The zip folder also incl...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Social Influence...
<div><p>Third party punishment can be evolutionarily stable if there is heterogeneity in the cost of...
In a prior article, we argued that punishment theorists need to take into account the counterintuiti...
Punishment has been proposed as being central to two distinctively human phenomena: cooperation in g...
Do opportunities to punish non-punishers help to stabilize cooperation? Or do opportunities to punis...
Human social interactions are regulated by moral norms that define individual obligations and rights...
<div><p>Why did punishment and the use of reputation evolve in humans? According to one family of th...
Current literature views the punishment of free-riders as an under-supplied public good, carried out...
The file attached to this record is the author's version. The Publisher's final version can be fou...
Why did punishment and the use of reputation evolve in humans? According to one family of theories, ...
This paper presents results from a prisoner’s dilemma game experiment with a third party punisher. T...