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Predicting the effect of peer punishment on cooperation (Public)

Project PGG
Study ID sspp-2024-0033-v1
Study Title Predicting the effect of peer punishment on cooperation
Authors Mohammed Alsobay, David G. Rand, Duncan J. Watts, Abdullah Almaatouq
Completion Time 20 Minutes
Close Date (UTC) Nov. 30, 2024
Discipline Other
Field Game Theory, Collective Behavior, Computational Social Science, Behavioral Science, Behavioral Economics
Country Online (limited countries)
Abstract
Peer punishment has been shown to moderate social cooperation in public goods games (PGGs). This study aims to understand how the effect of peer punishment on cooperation in public goods games (PGGs) varies with the parameters of the game design. For example, are punishments more effective in small or large groups? You will be asked to make predictions about how collaborative behavior in a public goods game (PGG) is affected by whether participants in the game are able to punish each other or not.



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