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Global Application of the Ultimatum Game Across Diverse Groups
The ultimatum game is a widely used experimental tool that has been conducted around the world. Its application spans diverse groups of participants, including students, farmers, warehouse workers, and hunter-gatherers, allowing researchers to study economic behavior across different social and cultural contexts.
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CORE Econ
Ch.4 Strategic interactions and social dilemmas - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Global Application of the Ultimatum Game Across Diverse Groups
Setup of the Ultimatum Game Experiment
A $35 Offer in the Ultimatum Game
Economic Rent in the Ultimatum Game
Simplified Ultimatum Game with Two Offers
Strategic Considerations in the General Ultimatum Game
Determinants of Ultimatum Game Outcomes
Labor Strikes as a Real-World Ultimatum Game
Using the Ultimatum Game to Study Social Preferences and Rent Sharing
Ultimatum Game with Competing Responders
The Take-it-or-Leave-it Rule and Proposer's Bargaining Power
Responder's Veto Power as a Limit on Proposer's Bargaining Power
The Labor Market Hiring Process as an Ultimatum Game
Evaluating Substantive and Procedural Fairness in the Ultimatum Game
In a one-shot ultimatum game involving a $100 prize, which of the following scenarios presents the biggest challenge to the assumption that individuals act purely out of self-interest to maximize their own financial gain?
Analyzing a Seemingly Irrational Economic Decision
A two-person game is structured as follows: Player 1 (the Proposer) is given a sum of money and must offer a portion of it to Player 2 (the Responder). The Responder can then either accept the offer, in which case the money is split as proposed, or reject it, in which case both players receive nothing. Arrange the following events of a single round of this game in the correct chronological order.
According to a model where individuals are assumed to be perfectly rational and motivated solely by self-interest, a Responder in the ultimatum game should reject any offer they perceive as unfair, even if it is greater than zero.
Strategic Decision-Making in a Bargaining Scenario
Match each role or outcome in the ultimatum game with its corresponding description.
Analyzing the Proposer's Strategy in a Bargaining Game
Evaluating the Impact of Intentionality on Bargaining Outcomes
Analyzing the Impact of Competition on Bargaining Outcomes
Interpreting Experimental Bargaining Results
Defining the Rules of the Ultimatum Game
Functions of Pirate Institutions as 'Rules of the Game'
Learn After
Comparison of Ultimatum Game Responses: Kenyan Farmers vs. US Students
Comparison of Proposer Offers: Kenyan Farmers vs. US Students
Comparison of Ultimatum Game Behavior: Rural Missourians vs. Kenyan Farmers
Source Study: Fischbacher, Fong, and Fehr (2009) on Fairness, Errors, and the Power of Competition
An economist conducts the same economic sharing experiment, known as the ultimatum game, in two different societies. In Society 1, the person proposing the split (the Proposer) consistently offers a large portion of the total sum (e.g., 40-50%). In Society 2, Proposers consistently offer a much smaller portion (e.g., 10-20%). Assuming the Proposers in both societies are primarily motivated by maximizing their own payoff, what is the most likely reason for this difference in behavior?
Interpreting Experimental Economic Data
Economists have conducted the ultimatum game with a wide variety of participant groups around the world, including students in industrialized nations, farmers in developing countries, and individuals from hunter-gatherer societies. A consistent finding is that the average offers from Proposers and the rejection rates from Responders can differ significantly between these groups. What is the primary implication of this observed behavioral variation?
Interpreting Cross-Cultural Economic Behavior
Analyzing Ultimatum Game Behavior in New Contexts
A researcher conducts an ultimatum game experiment exclusively with university students in a large European city. They find that Proposers offer, on average, 25% of the total sum, and Responders rarely reject offers above 10%. The researcher concludes that these findings reveal a universal human tendency to prioritize any personal gain over fairness. Based on what is known from applying this experiment across diverse populations, what is the most significant weakness in this conclusion?
Experimental results from applying the ultimatum game across diverse global populations consistently show that individuals in non-industrialized societies are more likely to accept any positive offer, aligning more closely with a model of pure economic self-interest than individuals in industrialized societies.
The application of a simple economic sharing game across a wide variety of human societies—from university students to hunter-gatherers—has revealed significant differences in how people propose and respond to offers. In some groups, low offers are common and accepted, while in others, low offers are frequently rejected, and Proposers tend to offer nearly half the sum. What is the most significant implication of these varied findings for the field of economics?
Value of Cross-Cultural Economic Experiments
Evaluating Competing Hypotheses in Economic Anthropology
Rationale for Cross-Cultural Ultimatum Game Studies
Interpreting Proposer Behavior in Economic Games
Researchers use the ultimatum game to study economic behavior in diverse populations. Match each participant group with the primary research rationale for studying them in this context.
The consistent finding from economic sharing experiments (ultimatum games) conducted across diverse global populations is that most people, regardless of cultural background, act as purely self-interested individuals, with proposers offering the minimum possible amount and responders accepting any non-zero offer.
An economic experiment involving two participants, a 'Proposer' and a 'Responder', is conducted in two different, isolated communities. In Community 1, Proposers consistently offer a nearly equal split of a sum of money, and Responders frequently turn down offers they perceive as low, resulting in neither participant receiving anything. In Community 2, Proposers tend to offer a small fraction of the sum, and Responders almost always accept any offer greater than zero. Based on a comparison of these outcomes, what is the most sound inference?
Evaluating the Significance of Experimental Economic Games
An economist studies a small, tight-knit community using an economic game where one person (the 'Proposer') suggests how to split a sum of money, and another person (the 'Responder') can accept or reject the offer. If the offer is rejected, neither person receives anything. The economist observes that Proposers consistently offer close to a 50/50 split, and Responders frequently reject any offer below 40%. The economist concludes: 'This community possesses an exceptionally strong, innate sense of fairness compared to other groups studied globally.' Which of the following statements presents the most significant challenge to the economist's conclusion?
Critiquing the 'Economic Man' Model
In an economic experiment, a 'Proposer' suggests how to split a sum of money with a 'Responder'. If the Responder accepts, they get the proposed split. If they reject, both get nothing. When this experiment was conducted with two different, isolated groups, the following patterns emerged:
- Group A: Proposers frequently offered 40-50% of the total sum. Responders in this group were very likely to reject any offer below 30%.
- Group B: Proposers most commonly offered 10-20% of the total sum. Responders in this group would typically accept any offer, even those as low as 10%.
An analyst reviews only the Proposer data and concludes: 'The Proposers in Group A are inherently more generous and have a stronger sense of fairness than the Proposers in Group B.'
Which of the following statements provides the strongest critique of the analyst's conclusion?
Critiquing an Experimental Design