Results 261 to 270 of about 336,006 (300)
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Measuring socially appropriate social preferences

Games and Economic Behavior, 2022
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Carpenter, Jeffrey P., Robbett, Andrea
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Analysis of Social Preference

IFAC Proceedings Volumes, 1982
Abstract Since 1973 Government of Japan has made a survey of social preference, i.e. how people feel about their living conditions, once for three years. This paper presents results of the analysis of the data of the most recent survey, i.e. in 1978.
Y. Kaya, S. Mori
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The econometric modelling of social preferences [PDF]

open access: possibleTheory and Decision, 2012
The `modelling of social preferences' noted in the heading is investigated on the base of normative modelling of individuals' behavior with respect to fairness. The authors follow \textit{A. W. Cappelen} et al. [``The pluralism of fairness ideals: an experimental approach'', Am. Econ. Rev. 97, No. 3, 818--827 (2007; \url{doi:10.1257/aer.97.3.818})] and
CONTE, anna, Moffatt, Peter G.
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Social Preferences

2011
This chapter examines how social preferences contribute to human cooperation. It considers experimental and other evidence showing that even in one-shot interactions many individuals, most in some settings, willingly cooperate with strangers even at a cost to themselves.
Samuel Bowles, Herbert Gintis
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Endogenous Social Preferences [PDF]

open access: possibleReview of Radical Political Economics, 2002
A long-standing discussion in economics asks whether institutions affect people’s social predispositions. The current experiment tests whether different aspects of markets affect people’s social preferences. The results are that people are less socially minded in more anonymous settings.
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Social Preferences

Journal of Economic Methodology
Book Review Social Preferences: An Introduction to Behavioural Economics and Experimental Researchby M. Drouvelis, Newcastle upon Tyne, the UK, Agenda Publishing, 2021, 210 p., £22.99, ISBN 9781788214179 (paperback)
Samuel Bowles, Herbert Gintis
  +8 more sources

Preferences over social risk

Oxford Economic Papers, 2005
We elicit individual preferences over social risk. We identify the extent to which these preferences are correlated with preferences over individual risk and the well-being of others. We examine these preferences in the context of laboratory experiments over small, anonymous groups, although the methodological issues extend to larger groups that form ...
Harrison, Glenn W.   +3 more
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Social Preferences

2021
This introduction to one of the key areas of behavioural economics <i>Social Preferences</i> explains in clear, nontechnical language how particular groups of experiments have been used by behavioural economists to shed light on the processes of economic decision making. These include bargaining games, trust games and public good games. The
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Social preferences aren’t preferences

Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 2010
Abstract Experimental economists robustly observe that people in the laboratory regularly make choices that result in lower payoffs for themselves. When faced with this paradox of preferences, economists posit that there must be two meanings of preferences: preferences for the self and preferences for the social. In this paper I argue that this is an
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Value Preferences of Social Workers

Social Work, 2018
The current study examines value preferences of social workers in Israel. Using a theoretical framework of person-environment fit paradigm and theory of values, the study compared social workers (N = 641, mean age = 37.7 years, 91 percent female) with a representative sample of Israeli Jews (N = 1,600, mean age = 44.2, 52 percent female ...
Eugene, Tartakovsky, Sophie D, Walsh
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