Abstract
Abstract
We report on three pre-registered studies testing whether people in the
position of describing a decision problem to decision-makers exploit this
opportunity for their benefit, by choosing descriptions that may be
potentially beneficial for themselves. In Study 1, recipients of an extreme
dictator game (where dictators can either take the whole pie for themselves
or give it entirely to the receiver) are asked to choose the instructions
used to introduce the game to dictators, from six different instructions
known from previous research to affect dictators’ decisions. The results
demonstrate that some dictator game recipients tend to choose instructions
that make them more likely to receive a higher payoff. Study 2 shows that
people who choose descriptions that make them more likely to receive a
higher payoff indeed believe that they will receive a higher payoff. Study 3
shows that receivers are more likely than dictators to choose these
self-serving descriptions. In sum, our work suggests that some people choose
descriptions that are beneficial to themselves; we also found some evidence
that deliberative thinking and young age are associated with this
tendency.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Economics and Econometrics,Applied Psychology,General Decision Sciences
Cited by
4 articles.
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