Exploring the effects of working for endowments on behaviour in standard economic games.

In recent years, significant advances have been made in understanding the adaptive (ultimate) and mechanistic (proximate) explanations for the evolution and maintenance of cooperation. Studies of cooperative behaviour in humans invariably use economic games. These games have provided important insig...

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Main Authors: Freya Harrison, Claire El Mouden
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3217995?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-4774a45f44f74d07928ea651c17a75962020-11-25T01:46:56ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-01611e2762310.1371/journal.pone.0027623Exploring the effects of working for endowments on behaviour in standard economic games.Freya HarrisonClaire El MoudenIn recent years, significant advances have been made in understanding the adaptive (ultimate) and mechanistic (proximate) explanations for the evolution and maintenance of cooperation. Studies of cooperative behaviour in humans invariably use economic games. These games have provided important insights into the mechanisms that maintain economic and social cooperation in our species. However, they usually rely on the division of monetary tokens which are given to participants by the investigator. The extent to which behaviour in such games may reflect behaviour in the real world of biological markets--where money must be earned and behavioural strategies incur real costs and benefits--is unclear. To provide new data on the potential scale of this problem, we investigated whether people behaved differently in two standard economic games (public goods game and dictator game) when they had to earn their monetary endowments through the completion of dull or physically demanding tasks, as compared with simply being given the endowment. The requirement for endowments to be 'earned' through labour did not affect behaviour in the dictator game. However, the requirement to complete a dull task reduced cooperation in the public goods game among the subset of participants who were not familiar with game theory. There has been some effort to test whether the conclusions drawn from standard, token-based cooperation games adequately reflect cooperative behaviour 'in the wild.' However, given the almost total reliance on such games to study cooperation, more exploration of this issue would be welcome. Our data are not unduly worrying, but they do suggest that further exploration is needed if we are to make general inferences about human behaviour from the results of structured economic games.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3217995?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Freya Harrison
Claire El Mouden
spellingShingle Freya Harrison
Claire El Mouden
Exploring the effects of working for endowments on behaviour in standard economic games.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Freya Harrison
Claire El Mouden
author_sort Freya Harrison
title Exploring the effects of working for endowments on behaviour in standard economic games.
title_short Exploring the effects of working for endowments on behaviour in standard economic games.
title_full Exploring the effects of working for endowments on behaviour in standard economic games.
title_fullStr Exploring the effects of working for endowments on behaviour in standard economic games.
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the effects of working for endowments on behaviour in standard economic games.
title_sort exploring the effects of working for endowments on behaviour in standard economic games.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description In recent years, significant advances have been made in understanding the adaptive (ultimate) and mechanistic (proximate) explanations for the evolution and maintenance of cooperation. Studies of cooperative behaviour in humans invariably use economic games. These games have provided important insights into the mechanisms that maintain economic and social cooperation in our species. However, they usually rely on the division of monetary tokens which are given to participants by the investigator. The extent to which behaviour in such games may reflect behaviour in the real world of biological markets--where money must be earned and behavioural strategies incur real costs and benefits--is unclear. To provide new data on the potential scale of this problem, we investigated whether people behaved differently in two standard economic games (public goods game and dictator game) when they had to earn their monetary endowments through the completion of dull or physically demanding tasks, as compared with simply being given the endowment. The requirement for endowments to be 'earned' through labour did not affect behaviour in the dictator game. However, the requirement to complete a dull task reduced cooperation in the public goods game among the subset of participants who were not familiar with game theory. There has been some effort to test whether the conclusions drawn from standard, token-based cooperation games adequately reflect cooperative behaviour 'in the wild.' However, given the almost total reliance on such games to study cooperation, more exploration of this issue would be welcome. Our data are not unduly worrying, but they do suggest that further exploration is needed if we are to make general inferences about human behaviour from the results of structured economic games.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3217995?pdf=render
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