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The strategy method conflates confusion with conditional cooperation in public goods games: evidence from large scale replications

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  • Burton-Chellew, Maxwell
  • D'Amico, Victoire
  • Guérin, Claire

Abstract

The strategy method is often used in public goods games to measure individuals’ willingness to cooperate depending on the level of cooperation by others (conditional cooperation). However, while the strategy method is informative, it risks being suggestive and inducing elevated levels of conditional cooperation that are not motivated by concerns for fairness, especially in uncertain or confused participants. Here we make 845 participants complete the strategy method two times, once with human and once with computerized groupmates. Cooperation with computers cannot rationally be motivated by concerns for fairness. Worryingly, 69% of participants conditionally cooperated with computers, whereas only 7% conditionally cooperated with humans while not cooperating with computers. Overall, 83% of participants cooperated with computers, contributing 89% as much as towards humans. Results from games with computers present a serious problem for measuring social behaviors.

Suggested Citation

  • Burton-Chellew, Maxwell & D'Amico, Victoire & Guérin, Claire, 2021. "The strategy method conflates confusion with conditional cooperation in public goods games: evidence from large scale replications," SocArXiv 7d5yn, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:socarx:7d5yn
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/7d5yn
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

    1. Burton-Chellew, Maxwell & West, Stuart, 2022. "The black box as a control for payoff-based learning in economic games," SocArXiv 5k4ez, Center for Open Science.

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