Anonymity versus privacy in the dictator game: revealing donor decisions to recipients does not substantially impact donor behavior.

Anonymity is often offered in economic experiments in order to eliminate observer effects and induce behavior that would be exhibited under private circumstances. However, anonymity differs from privacy in that interactants are only unaware of each others' identities, while having full knowledg...

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Main Author: Jeffrey Winking
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4274055?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-213fa73f3d0c40c89600cdc27865a5ce2020-11-24T21:23:16ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01912e11541910.1371/journal.pone.0115419Anonymity versus privacy in the dictator game: revealing donor decisions to recipients does not substantially impact donor behavior.Jeffrey WinkingAnonymity is often offered in economic experiments in order to eliminate observer effects and induce behavior that would be exhibited under private circumstances. However, anonymity differs from privacy in that interactants are only unaware of each others' identities, while having full knowledge of each others' actions. Such situations are rare outside the laboratory and anonymity might not meet the requirements of some participants to psychologically engage as if their actions were private. In order to explore the impact of a lack of privacy on prosocial behaviors, I expand on a study reported in Dana et al. (2006) in which recipients were left unaware of the Dictator Game and given donations as "bonuses" to their show-up fees for other tasks. In the current study, I explore whether differences between a private Dictator Game (sensu Dana et al. (2006)) and a standard anonymous one are due to a desire by dictators to avoid shame or to pursue prestige. Participants of a Dictator Game were randomly assigned to one of four categories-one in which the recipient knew of (1) any donation by an anonymous donor (including zero donations), (2) nothing at all, (3) only zero donations, and (4) and only non-zero donations. The results suggest that a lack of privacy increases the shame that selfish-acting participants experience, but that removing such a cost has only minimal effects on actual behavior.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4274055?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeffrey Winking
spellingShingle Jeffrey Winking
Anonymity versus privacy in the dictator game: revealing donor decisions to recipients does not substantially impact donor behavior.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jeffrey Winking
author_sort Jeffrey Winking
title Anonymity versus privacy in the dictator game: revealing donor decisions to recipients does not substantially impact donor behavior.
title_short Anonymity versus privacy in the dictator game: revealing donor decisions to recipients does not substantially impact donor behavior.
title_full Anonymity versus privacy in the dictator game: revealing donor decisions to recipients does not substantially impact donor behavior.
title_fullStr Anonymity versus privacy in the dictator game: revealing donor decisions to recipients does not substantially impact donor behavior.
title_full_unstemmed Anonymity versus privacy in the dictator game: revealing donor decisions to recipients does not substantially impact donor behavior.
title_sort anonymity versus privacy in the dictator game: revealing donor decisions to recipients does not substantially impact donor behavior.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Anonymity is often offered in economic experiments in order to eliminate observer effects and induce behavior that would be exhibited under private circumstances. However, anonymity differs from privacy in that interactants are only unaware of each others' identities, while having full knowledge of each others' actions. Such situations are rare outside the laboratory and anonymity might not meet the requirements of some participants to psychologically engage as if their actions were private. In order to explore the impact of a lack of privacy on prosocial behaviors, I expand on a study reported in Dana et al. (2006) in which recipients were left unaware of the Dictator Game and given donations as "bonuses" to their show-up fees for other tasks. In the current study, I explore whether differences between a private Dictator Game (sensu Dana et al. (2006)) and a standard anonymous one are due to a desire by dictators to avoid shame or to pursue prestige. Participants of a Dictator Game were randomly assigned to one of four categories-one in which the recipient knew of (1) any donation by an anonymous donor (including zero donations), (2) nothing at all, (3) only zero donations, and (4) and only non-zero donations. The results suggest that a lack of privacy increases the shame that selfish-acting participants experience, but that removing such a cost has only minimal effects on actual behavior.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4274055?pdf=render
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