2010
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.1011321
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Punishment with Uncertain Outcomes in the Prisoner’s Dilemma

Abstract: This paper experimentally investigates whether risk-averse individuals punish less if the outcome of punishment is uncertain than when it is certain. Our design includes three treatments: Baseline in which the one-shot prisoner's dilemma game is played; Certain Punishment in which the prisoner's dilemma game is followed by a punishment stage allowing subjects to decrease the other player's payoff by 2 Euros; and Uncertain Punishment in which subjects could decrease the other player's payoff with a 50% probabil… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The direction of this effect was consistent with past findings—sympathy triggered lower defection rates and anger triggered higher defection rates compared to the neutral condition (Batson and Moran, 1999; Bosman and van Winden, 2002; Ben-Shakhar et al, 2004; Duersch and Servatka, 2007; Van Lange, 2008). Moreover, the strengths of these impacts were found to be more or less symmetrical compared to the neutral condition, despite only the anger condition having significant influences on participant's physiological arousal.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…The direction of this effect was consistent with past findings—sympathy triggered lower defection rates and anger triggered higher defection rates compared to the neutral condition (Batson and Moran, 1999; Bosman and van Winden, 2002; Ben-Shakhar et al, 2004; Duersch and Servatka, 2007; Van Lange, 2008). Moreover, the strengths of these impacts were found to be more or less symmetrical compared to the neutral condition, despite only the anger condition having significant influences on participant's physiological arousal.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Sympathetic concern also encourages higher donations when a victim (a starving child in Africa) is identifiable (where participants receive a photo and description of the child), than when the victim is presented as a non-identifiable single victim or merely as a statistic (Small et al, 2007). It is also found to encourage more generous decisions toward the other person in economic decision-making games when the outcome of interaction depends on two individuals, such as in the Prisoner's Dilemma (Batson and Moran, 1999; Batson and Ahmad, 2001; Duersch and Servatka, 2007) and “Ring Measure of Social Values” (Van Lange, 2008). In these two games, higher cooperation rates are promoted when participants perceive their opponent to be in need and when they adopt their opponent's feelings (Batson and Moran, 1999; Van Lange, 2008).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…5 Numerous papers extend these results (for reviews, see Herrmann, 2009, Chaudhuri, 2011), including work focusing on the cost to the punisher (Anderson andPutterman, 2006, Carpenter, 2007), on punishment's effectiveness (that is, the punisher-punished cost ratio, see Nikiforakis and Normann, 2008), and on societal implications of costly punishment. Duersch and Servátka (2009) explore the effect of costly punishment in a prisoner's dilemma set-up, finding punishment to be less prevalent than in the literature on public goods games, but added punishment stages in the PD game otherwise appear absent from the literature.…”
Section: Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fines are then determined by multiplying the amount assigned by the punisher by a punishment enhancement factor, β, usually taken equal to 3. With two exceptions [33,34], there is no literature investigating the effect of stochastic β on the evolution of social norms of punishment and cooperation; the provisional conclusion appears to be that uncertainty does not affect the likelihood of punishing others, nor the level of cooperation [34].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%