Are Social Preferences Skin Deep? Dictators under Cognitive Load
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Date
2009-07-03T06:31:24Z
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Abstract
We study the impact of cognitive load in dictator games to test two conflicting views of
moral behavior. Are social preferences skin‐deep in the sense that they are the result of
humans’ cognitive reasoning while the natural instinct is selfish, or is rather the natural
instinct to share fairly while our cognitive capacities are able to adjust moral principles in a
self‐serving manner? Some previous studies in more complex settings give conflicting
answers, and to disentangle different possible mechanisms we use simple games. We study
both charitable giving and the behavior of dictators under high and low cognitive load,
where high cognitive load is assumed to reduce the impact of cognitive processes on
behavior. In the dictator game we use both a give frame, where the dictator is given an
amount and may share some or all of it to a partner, and a take frame, where dictators may
take from an amount initially allocated to the partner. The results from four different studies
indicate that the effect of cognitive load is small if at all existing.
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Keywords
Social Preferences, experiments, dictator game, cognitive load