6533b7d4fe1ef96bd1261c31
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Do Children Cooperate Conditionally? Adapting the Strategy Method for First-Graders
Valentin WagnerHenning HermesDaniel SchunkDaniel SchunkFlorian HettMario MechtelFelix Schmidtsubject
Scheme (programming language)Protocol (science)IncentiveHuman–computer interactionComputer sciencePublic goods gameIn-group favoritismSample (statistics)computerAttention spancomputer.programming_languageHaptic technologydescription
We develop a public goods game (PGG) to measure cooperation and conditional cooperation in young children. Our design addresses several obstacles in adapting simultaneous and sequential PGGs to children who are not yet able to read or write, do not possess advanced abilities to calculate payoffs, and only have a very limited attention span at their disposal. It features the combination of haptic offline explanation, fully standardized audiovisual instructions, computerized choices based on touch-screens, and a suitable incentive scheme. Applying our experimental protocol to a sample of German first-graders, we find that already 6-year-olds cooperate conditionally and that the relative frequency of different cooperation types matches the findings for adult subjects. We also find that neither survey items from teachers nor from parents predict unconditional or conditional cooperation behavior; this underlines the value of incentivized experimental protocols for measuring cooperation in children.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2018-01-01 | SSRN Electronic Journal |