We study the effect of social influence on agentsâ decisions to engage in costly decentralized third-party punishment. In a laboratory experiment, participants play a modified Dictator game with third-party punishment and we elicit punishment decisions both in isolation and after providing information about peersâ average punishment. Results show that social influence is a major driver of third-party punishment: after receiving information on peersâ average punishment, participants revise initial punishment choices and seek conformity. Social influence effects are stronger when peers punished more than the individual punisher and conformity implies revising punishment upward. Adding to the information on peersâ punishment the possibility for other participants to sanction or reward with an emoticon the choices of the individual punisher does not change results. Our findings contrast with the predictions of major theories of social preferences and are only explained by special cases of models incorporating aversion to norm-breaking.
Fabbri, M., Carbonara, E. (2017). Social influence on third-party punishment: An experiment. JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC PSYCHOLOGY, 62, 204-230 [10.1016/j.joep.2017.07.003].
Social influence on third-party punishment: An experiment
Fabbri, Marco;Carbonara, Emanuela
2017
Abstract
We study the effect of social influence on agentsâ decisions to engage in costly decentralized third-party punishment. In a laboratory experiment, participants play a modified Dictator game with third-party punishment and we elicit punishment decisions both in isolation and after providing information about peersâ average punishment. Results show that social influence is a major driver of third-party punishment: after receiving information on peersâ average punishment, participants revise initial punishment choices and seek conformity. Social influence effects are stronger when peers punished more than the individual punisher and conformity implies revising punishment upward. Adding to the information on peersâ punishment the possibility for other participants to sanction or reward with an emoticon the choices of the individual punisher does not change results. Our findings contrast with the predictions of major theories of social preferences and are only explained by special cases of models incorporating aversion to norm-breaking.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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