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Part 1: Document Description
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Citation |
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Title: |
Old Age and Prosocial Behavior: Social Preferences or Experimental Confounds? [Dataset] |
Identification Number: |
doi:10.11588/data/10067 |
Distributor: |
heiDATA |
Date of Distribution: |
2016-02-03 |
Version: |
1 |
Bibliographic Citation: |
Kettner, Sara Elisa; Waichman, Israel, 2016, "Old Age and Prosocial Behavior: Social Preferences or Experimental Confounds? [Dataset]", https://doi.org/10.11588/data/10067, heiDATA, V1 |
Citation |
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Title: |
Old Age and Prosocial Behavior: Social Preferences or Experimental Confounds? [Dataset] |
Identification Number: |
doi:10.11588/data/10067 |
Authoring Entity: |
Kettner, Sara Elisa (Alfred-Weber-Institute of Economics) |
Waichman, Israel (Alfred-Weber-Institute of Economics) |
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Producer: |
Kettner, Sara Elisa |
Waichman, Israel |
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Distributor: |
heiDATA |
Distributor: |
heiDATA: Heidelberg Research Data Repository |
Access Authority: |
Waichman, Israel |
Date of Deposit: |
2016-02-02 |
Holdings Information: |
https://doi.org/10.11588/data/10067 |
Study Scope |
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Keywords: |
Social Sciences, social preferences, participant pool, dictator game, age, experimenter demand effect, hypothetical bias |
Topic Classification: |
C91, D64 |
Abstract: |
Experimental and field evidence indicate a positive link between social preferences and age, most strikingly between the elderly and young adults. However, it is possible that the seemingly positive link between age and preferences stems from confounds in experimental procedure. In a dictator game study we find that elderly participants do indeed transfer higher shares of their endowments to their peers than a standard sample of student participants. This result holds good even in treatments accounting for wealth differences and experimenter demand effects. However, we observe no difference in behavior when we compare elderly participants and students who have not previously participated in economic experiments. Accordingly, it is possible that the seemingly stronger social preferences of the elderly are due to confounds associated with lack of experience with economic experiments. In addition, when comparing incentivized and hypothetical transfer decisions, we observe a hypothetical bias in treatments with a "take" framing, but not in treatments with the standard "give" framing. |
Methodology and Processing |
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Sources Statement |
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Data Access |
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Citation Requirement: |
Please cite |
Other Study Description Materials |
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Final_Dataset_Kettner&Waichman.xlsx |
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Index_Dataset_Final.pdf |
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Translation of Instructions_hypothetical_give_5EURO.pdf |
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Translation of Instructions_hypothetical_take_5EURO.pdf |
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Translation of Instructions_Incentivized_give_5EURO.pdf |
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Translation of Instructions_Incentivized_take_5EURO.pdf |
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