Edwins Gwako
Edwins Gwako is a researcher who co-authored the 2006 Science paper titled 'Costly Punishment Across Human Societies,' a significant large-scale study in cross-cultural experimental economics.
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CORE Econ
Ch.4 Strategic interactions and social dilemmas - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Source Study: Henrich et al. (2006) on Costly Punishment Across Societies
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Book: Foundations of Human Sociality (2004)
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Source Study: Levitt & List (2007) on the Generalizability of Lab Experiments
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Interpreting Cross-Cultural Punishment Behavior
A 2006 cross-cultural study involving economic games in 15 small-scale societies found significant variation in how willing individuals were to punish others at a personal cost. What was a central conclusion drawn by the researchers regarding the source of this variation?
Evaluating Research Methodology in Cross-Cultural Economics
Interpreting Cross-Cultural Economic Behavior
In a cross-cultural experiment, participants from two different societies play an economic game. In this game, one player can punish another for making an unfair offer, but doing so comes at a personal cost. Society A is characterized by high levels of market integration and frequent anonymous economic transactions. Society B is a small-scale, more isolated society with limited interaction with outside markets. Based on the patterns observed in large-scale comparative studies of such games, what is the most likely difference in behavior you would expect to see between the two societies?
A large-scale experimental study conducted across 15 diverse small-scale societies found significant variation in how members of those societies chose to punish unfair economic behavior. In some societies, unfair offers were frequently punished at a personal cost to the punisher, while in others, such punishment was rare. What is the most significant implication of this cross-cultural variation for economic theory?
A 2006 cross-cultural study of 15 small-scale societies found a strong positive correlation between a society's level of market integration and its members' willingness to engage in costly punishment of unfair behavior in economic games. What is the most significant implication of this finding for understanding the foundations of large-scale human cooperation?
A 2006 cross-cultural experimental study involving 15 small-scale societies investigated the willingness of individuals to punish unfair behavior at a personal cost. The study found a strong positive correlation between a society's level of market integration (i.e., the frequency of anonymous market transactions) and the prevalence of costly punishment. Based on the study's conclusions, what is the most likely explanation for this relationship?
A large-scale, cross-cultural study published in 2006 examined behavior in economic games across 15 small-scale societies. The researchers observed significant variation in the willingness of individuals to punish others for unfair behavior, even at a personal cost. They found that the level of costly punishment was positively correlated with a society's level of market integration and the importance of cooperation in that society. Which of the following statements best analyzes the relationship identified by the researchers?
Core Findings of the 2006 Cross-Cultural Punishment Study
Critiquing Cross-Cultural Experimental Methods
Critique of Cross-Cultural Experimental Methodology
In an economic experiment, an observer (Player C) watches two other individuals (Player A and Player B) interact. Player A is given $20 and decides to share only $2 with Player B, keeping $18. Player C is then given the option to pay $1 from their own separate endowment to reduce Player A's earnings by $3. If Player C chooses to pay the $1, this action is a direct example of:
In a cross-cultural study on economic decision-making, researchers observed the following patterns in two different small-scale societies. Individuals played a game where one person (the 'Proposer') offers a split of a sum of money to another person (the 'Responder'), who can accept or reject the offer. If the offer is rejected, neither person gets anything.
- Society A: Proposers frequently offered 40-50% of the total sum. Responders in this society showed a high tendency to reject offers below 30%.
- Society B: Proposers' offers were more varied, with a significant number of offers below 20%. Responders in this society rarely rejected any offer, even very low ones.
Based on an analysis of these two patterns, which conclusion is best supported by the data?
A landmark 2006 cross-cultural study on economic behavior in 15 small-scale societies concluded that the human tendency to punish unfairness, even at a personal cost, is a uniform and consistent trait across different cultural contexts.
In an economic experiment, four individuals are given 20 monetary units (MUs) each. They can secretly contribute any amount to a group project. The total amount contributed is doubled by the experimenter and distributed equally among all four, regardless of their individual contributions. After contributions are revealed, players have the option to pay 1 MU to reduce another player's earnings by 3 MUs. Player A contributed 18 MUs, Player B contributed 15 MUs, Player C contributed 2 MUs, and Player D contributed 0 MUs. Which of the following actions best exemplifies the principle of 'costly punishment' as examined in the 2006 cross-cultural study on human societies?
Evaluating Challenges to Traditional Economic Models
A landmark 2006 study on economic behavior involved a large team of researchers conducting standardized experiments in 15 diverse, small-scale societies around the world. The study examined individuals' willingness to pay a personal cost to punish others for unfair actions. What is the primary analytical advantage of this cross-cultural methodological approach compared to a similar experiment conducted only with university students in a single industrialized nation?
A 2006 cross-cultural study found that the willingness of individuals to pay a personal cost to punish unfair behavior varied significantly across 15 small-scale societies. The researchers discovered a strong positive correlation between a society's level of cooperation in everyday economic activities (e.g., managing common resources) and the prevalence of this punitive behavior in the experiments. What is the most logical inference that can be drawn from this specific finding?
A critic of a major 2006 cross-cultural study on costly punishment argues: 'The observed differences in punitive behavior across the 15 societies are not due to varying social norms, but are simply an artifact of economic differences. Individuals in wealthier societies can simply 'afford' to punish others, while those in poorer societies cannot.' Based on the actual methodology of this landmark study, which of the following statements provides the strongest rebuttal to this specific critique?
Figure 4.18b: Actual Offers and Expected Rejection Proportions
Figure 4.18a: Distribution of Offers Made by Proposers