What makes people willing to pay costs to benefit others? Does such cooperation require effortful self-control, or do automatic, intuitive processes favor cooperation? Time pressure has been shown to increase cooperative behavior in Public Goods Games, implying a predisposition towards cooperation. Consistent with the hypothesis that this predisposition results from the fact that cooperation is typically advantageous outside the lab, it has further been shown that the time pressure effect is undermined by prior experience playing lab games (where selfishness is the more advantageous strategy). Furthermore, a recent study found that time pressure increases cooperation even in a game framed as a competition, suggesting that the time pressure ...
It has become an accepted paradigm that humans have "prosocial preferences" that lead to higher leve...
The cognitive basis of prosocial behaviour has received considerable recent attention. Previous work...
We experimentally examine the effects of varying time pressure in a coordination game with a label s...
<div><p>What makes people willing to pay costs to benefit others? Does such cooperation require effo...
We conducted an experiment causally manipulating reliance on more intuitive vs. more deliberative be...
Cooperation is central to human societies. Yet relatively little is known about the cognitive underp...
We review two fundamentally different ways that decision time is related to cooperation. First, stud...
Understanding human cooperation is a major scientific challenge. While cooperation is typically expl...
We study social dilemmas in (quasi-) continuous-time experiments, comparing games with different dur...
We study social dilemmas in (quasi-) continuous-time experiments, comparing games with different dur...
Many decisions in economics and finance have to be made under severe time pressure. Furthermore, pay...
We study social dilemmas in (quasi) continuous-time experiments, comparing games with different dura...
The results of numerous economic games suggest that humans behave more cooperatively than would be e...
Abstract: We report results from three well-known experimental paradigms, where we use time, rather ...
Numerous empirical studies show that when people play social dilemma games in the laboratory they of...
It has become an accepted paradigm that humans have "prosocial preferences" that lead to higher leve...
The cognitive basis of prosocial behaviour has received considerable recent attention. Previous work...
We experimentally examine the effects of varying time pressure in a coordination game with a label s...
<div><p>What makes people willing to pay costs to benefit others? Does such cooperation require effo...
We conducted an experiment causally manipulating reliance on more intuitive vs. more deliberative be...
Cooperation is central to human societies. Yet relatively little is known about the cognitive underp...
We review two fundamentally different ways that decision time is related to cooperation. First, stud...
Understanding human cooperation is a major scientific challenge. While cooperation is typically expl...
We study social dilemmas in (quasi-) continuous-time experiments, comparing games with different dur...
We study social dilemmas in (quasi-) continuous-time experiments, comparing games with different dur...
Many decisions in economics and finance have to be made under severe time pressure. Furthermore, pay...
We study social dilemmas in (quasi) continuous-time experiments, comparing games with different dura...
The results of numerous economic games suggest that humans behave more cooperatively than would be e...
Abstract: We report results from three well-known experimental paradigms, where we use time, rather ...
Numerous empirical studies show that when people play social dilemma games in the laboratory they of...
It has become an accepted paradigm that humans have "prosocial preferences" that lead to higher leve...
The cognitive basis of prosocial behaviour has received considerable recent attention. Previous work...
We experimentally examine the effects of varying time pressure in a coordination game with a label s...