The experimetrics of public goods: inferring motivations from contributions
From MaRDI portal
Publication:883201
Recommendations
- A note on stochastic public revelation and voluntary contributions to public goods
- Identifying preferences for conditional cooperation using individual beliefs
- Heterogeneous agents in public goods experiments
- Voluntary contributions to a dynamic public good: experimental evidence
- Explaining cooperative behavior in public goods games: how preferences and beliefs affect contribution levels
Cites work
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1907684 (Why is no real title available?)
- A microeconometric test of alternative stochastic theories of risky choice
- Are people conditionally cooperative? Evidence from a public goods experiment
- Finite mixture models
- Funding public goods with lotteries: experimental evidence.
- Nash as an organizing principle in the voluntary provision of public goods: Experimental evidence
- Robust Locally Weighted Regression and Smoothing Scatterplots
- Strength of the social dilemma in a public goods experiment: An exploration of the error hypothesis
- The geometry of mixture likelihoods: A general theory
Cited in
(21)- Habit formation and the Pareto-efficient provision of public goods
- Multiple motives of pro-social behavior: evidence from the solidarity game
- DO “CAPITALIZATION EFFECTS” FOR PUBLIC GOODS REVEAL THE PUBLIC'S WILLINGNESS TO PAY?
- Voluntary leadership: motivation and influence
- Explaining public goods game contributions with rational ability
- An experimental investigation of intrinsic motivations for giving
- Identifying types in contest experiments
- Leadership and the effective choice of information regime
- Expected utility theory and prospect theory: One wedding and a decent funeral
- Strategic behavior in regressions: an experimental study
- Mechanism design and bounded rationality: the case of type misreporting
- Explaining cooperative behavior in public goods games: how preferences and beliefs affect contribution levels
- The pivotal mechanism versus the voluntary contribution mechanism: an experimental comparison
- Use of data on planned contributions and stated beliefs in the measurement of social preferences
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 7369907 (Why is no real title available?)
- Motives and comprehension in a public goods game with induced emotions
- Are increased costs worth paying to raise non‐monetary utility?: Analysis of intrinsic motivation and fringe benefits
- The econometric modelling of social preferences
- Measuring socially appropriate social preferences
- Experience in public goods experiments
- Public good and private good valuation for waiting time reduction: a laboratory study
This page was built for publication: The experimetrics of public goods: inferring motivations from contributions
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q883201)