Summary information

Study title

Replication data: Generosity is a sign of trustworthiness – the punishment of selfishness is not

Creator

Przepiorka, Wojtek (Utrecht University)
Liebe, Ulf (University of Warwick)

Study number / PID

10.7802/1944 (GESIS)

10.7802/1944 (DOI)

Data access

Information not available

Series

Not available

Abstract

Peer-punishment is an important determinant of cooperation in human groups. It has been suggested that, at the proximate level of analysis, punitive preferences can explain why humans incur costs to punish their deviant peers. How punitive preferences could have evolved in humans is still not entirely understood. A possible explanation at the ultimate level of analysis comes from signaling theory. It has been argued that the punishment of defectors can be a type-separating signal of the punisher's cooperative intent. As a result, punishers are selected more often as interaction partners in social exchange and are partly compensated for the costs they incur when punishing defectors. A similar argument has been made with regard to acts of generosity. In a laboratory experiment, we investigate whether the punishment of a selfish division of money in a dictator game is a sign of trustworthiness and whether punishers are more trustworthy interaction partners in a trust game than non-punishers. We distinguish between second-party and third-party punishment and compare punitive acts with acts of generosity as signs of trustworthiness. We find that punishers are not more trustworthy than non-punishers and that punishers are not trusted more than non-punishers, both in the second-party and in the third-party punishment condition. To the contrary, second-party punishers are trusted less than their non-punishing counterparts. However, participants who choose a generous division of money are more trustworthy and are trusted more than participants who choose a selfish division or participants about whom no information is available. Our results suggest that, unlike for punitive acts, the signaling benefits of generosity are to be gained in social exchange.

Topics

Not available

Keywords

Not available

Methodology

Data collection period

25/03/2014 - 27/03/2014

Country

Switzerland

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Not available

Universe

In total, 186 subjects participated in our computerized laboratory experiment. Subjects were students from the University of Zurich and ETH Zurich, 51% were female and they were 23.6 years old on average (sd = 6.71).

Sampling procedure

All participants in our experiment were recruited from the subject pool maintained by the University Registration Center for Study Participants (UAST) of the University of Zurich and ETH Zurich. A random sample of participants was drawn from this subject pool and people included in this sample were invited via e-mail to participate in the experiment.

Kind of data

Not available

Data collection mode

Laboratory experiment

Access

Publisher

GESIS Data Archive for the Social Sciences

Publication year

2016

Terms of data access

Free access (without registration) - The research data can be downloaded directly by anyone without further limitations. CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

Related publications

Not available