← Volver atrás
Publicaciones

Experimental subjects are not different

Autores

Exadaktylos, Filippos , Espin, Antonio M. , BRAÑAS GARZA, PABLO ERNESTO

Publicación externa

Si

Medio

Sci Rep

Alcance

Article

Naturaleza

Científica

Cuartil JCR

Cuartil SJR

Impacto JCR

5.078

Impacto SJR

1.998

Fecha de publicacion

14/02/2013

ISI

000314863900001

Abstract

Experiments using economic games are becoming a major source for the study of human social behavior. These experiments are usually conducted with university students who voluntarily choose to participate. Across the natural and social sciences, there is some concern about how this "particular" subject pool may systematically produce biased results. Focusing on social preferences, this study employs data from a survey-experiment conducted with a representative sample of a city's population (N = 765). We report behavioral data from five experimental decisions in three canonical games: dictator, ultimatum and trust games. The dataset includes students and non-students as well as volunteers and non-volunteers. We separately examine the effects of being a student and being a volunteer on behavior, which allows a ceteris paribus comparison between self-selected students (students*volunteers) and the representative population. Our results suggest that self-selected students are an appropriate subject pool for the study of social behavior.

Miembros de la Universidad Loyola