Deterministic versus probabilistic consequences of trust and trustworthiness: An experimental investigation
Abstract There is overwhelming evidence of reciprocal behavior, driven by intentions. However, the role of consequences is less clear cut. Experimentally manipulating how efficient trust and reciprocity can be in deterministic and uncertain environments allows us to study how payoff consequences of trust and trustworthiness affect reciprocity. According to the results for our modified Investment Game, trustees reward trust more when trust is more efficient but do not adjust rewards when the efficiency of rewarding is varied. Furthermore, higher deterministic benefits result in higher levels of reciprocity for all trust levels, whereas an uncertain environment diminishes reciprocity.
Finite Sample Efficiency and Drawbacks: An Illustration
Historically, finite-sample efficiency was the first notion of optimality introduced and it is still encountered in introductory statistics texts. The definition has several drawbacks however, one being that it is restricted to the class of unbiased estimators. An example is given to illustrate this.
Deterministic versus probabilistic consequences of trust and trustworthiness: An experimental investigation
Accepted version of an article from the journal: Journal of Economic Psychology. Version of record available from Elsevier on Science Direct: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.joep.2013.11.003 here is overwhelming evidence of reciprocal behavior, driven by intentions. However, the role of consequences is less clear cut. Experimentally manipulating how efficient trust and reciprocity can be in deterministic and uncertain environments allows us to study how payoff consequences of trust and trustworthiness affect reciprocity. According to the results for our modified Investment Game, trustees reward trust more when trust is more efficient but do not adjust rewards when the efficiency of rewarding is…
Gender differences in recollections of economic socialization, financial self-efficacy, and financial literacy
The OECD/INFE international surveys of adult financial literacy (OECD/INFE 2016, 2020) show gender differences in financial literacy in developed countries in Europe. In this study, we examine whether these differences can be explained by gender differences in parental economic socialization using the Dutch 2018 DHS household survey. We investigate whether respondents' recollection of economic socialization when young predict their adult economic behavior and self-assessed financial knowledge. The results from ordinal logit and logistic regressions and for nonlinear equations decompositions reveal gender differences in the recollection of economic socialization and in how socialization prac…
The place of mathematical models in psychology and the social sciences.
Accepted version of an article in the journal: American Psychologist. The copy of record available from APA: http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0037068
Hyperbolic discount curves: a reply to Ainslie
Published version of an article in the journal: Theory and Decision. Also available from the publisher at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11238-013-9361-8 Ainslie (Theory and Decision, 73, 3-34, 2012) challenges our interpretation of the properties of hyperbolic discount curves in an iterated prisoners' dilemma (IPD) model. In this reply, we discuss the emergence of hyperbolic discount functions in the behavioral economics literature and evaluate their properties. Furthermore, we present a summarized version of our IPD model and evaluate Ainslie's points of contention.
Modeling alternatives to exponential discounting
Masteroppgave i økonomi og administrasjon - Universitetet i Agder 2009 One area that is often overlooked by economists and social scientists is discounting. Most economic models of intertemporal choice make use of Samuelson’s (1937) DU model which leads to an exponential discount function. Divergences from what economic modelling predicts and empirical findings are on the most part attributed to factors other than the discount function employed. We review the literature on the DU model and identify its behavioral anomalies. We look into suggested quasi-hyperbolic and hyperbolic models that in part account for these anomalies. We analyze an infinite IPD game and demonstrate that under quasi-…