Summary information

Study title

Replication data: Natural and Strategic Generosity as Signals of Trustworthiness

Creator

Gambetta, Diego (Collegio Carlo Alberto, Turin)
Przepiorka, Wojtek (Utrecht University)

Study number / PID

10.7802/1927 (GESIS)

10.7802/1927 (DOI)

Data access

Information not available

Series

Not available

Abstract

We exploit the fact that generosity and trustworthiness are highly correlated and the former can thus be a sign of the latter. Subjects decide between a generous and a mean split in a dictator game. Some of them are informed from the start that afterwards they will participate in a trust game and that their choice in the dictator game may matter; others are not informed in advance. In the trust game, before trusters decide whether or not to trust, some trustees can reveal (or conceal) only their true choice in the dictator game, while others can say to trusters, truthfully or otherwise, what they chose. We find that a generous choice made naturally by uninformed trustees and reliably revealed is more effective in persuading trusters to trust than a generous choice that could be strategic or a lie. Moreover, we find that, when they can, mean subjects lie and go on to be untrustworthy.

Topics

Not available

Keywords

Not available

Methodology

Data collection period

01/06/2011 - 03/11/2011

Country

United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Not available

Universe

In total, 215 subjects participated in our computerized laboratory experiment. Subjects were Oxford University students, 46% were female and they were 23.4 (sd = 4.91) years old on average.

Sampling procedure

All participants in our experiment were recruited from the subject pool maintained by the Centre for Experimental Social Sciences (CESS) in Oxford. 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

2014

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