The Strategy Method Risks Conflating Confusion with a Social Preference for Conditional Cooperation in Public Goods Games

Détails

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Etat: Public
Version: Final published version
Licence: CC BY 4.0
ID Serval
serval:BIB_572D2053F8D4
Type
Article: article d'un périodique ou d'un magazine.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Titre
The Strategy Method Risks Conflating Confusion with a Social Preference for Conditional Cooperation in Public Goods Games
Périodique
Games
Auteur⸱e⸱s
Burton-Chellew Maxwell N., D'Amico Victoire, Guérin Claire
ISSN
2073-4336
Statut éditorial
Publié
Date de publication
25/10/2022
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
13
Numéro
6
Pages
69
Langue
anglais
Résumé
The strategy method is often used in public goods games to measure an individual’s willingness to cooperate depending on the level of cooperation by their groupmates (conditional cooperation). However, while the strategy method is informative, it risks conflating confusion with a desire for fair outcomes, and its presentation may risk inducing elevated levels of conditional cooperation. This problem was highlighted by two previous studies which found that the strategy method could also detect equivalent levels of cooperation even among those grouped with computerized groupmates, indicative of confusion or irrational responses. However, these studies did not use large samples (n = 40 or 72) and only made participants complete the strategy method one time, with computerized groupmates, preventing within-participant comparisons. Here, in contrast, 845 participants completed the strategy method two times, once with human and once with computerized groupmates. Our research aims were twofold: (1) to check the robustness of previous results with a large sample under various presentation conditions; and (2) to use a within-participant design to categorize participants according to how they behaved across the two scenarios. Ideally, a clean and reliable measure of conditional cooperation would find participants conditionally cooperating with humans and not cooperating with computers. Worryingly, only 7% of participants met this criterion. Overall, 83% of participants cooperated with the computers, and the mean contributions towards computers were 89% as large as those towards humans. These results, robust to the various presentation and order effects, pose serious concerns for the measurement of social preferences and question the idea that human cooperation is motivated by a concern for equal outcomes.
Mots-clé
Applied Mathematics, Statistics, Probability and Uncertainty, Statistics and Probability
Web of science
Open Access
Oui
Création de la notice
07/02/2023 10:25
Dernière modification de la notice
25/11/2023 7:14
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