Self-Selection and Variations in the Laboratory Measurment of Other-Regarding Preferences Across Subject Pools: Evidence from One College Student and Two Adult Samples
We measure the other-regarding behavior in samples from three related populations in the upper Midwest of the United States: college students, non-student adults from the community surrounding the college, and adult trainee truckers in a residential training program. The use of typical experimental economics recruitment procedures made the first two groups substantially self-selected. Because the context reduced the opportunity cost of participating dramatically, 91% of the adult trainees solicited participated, leaving little scope for self-selection in this sample. We find no differences in the elicited other-regarding preferences between the selfselected adults and the adult trainees, suggesting that selection is unlikely to bias inferences about the prevalence of other-regarding preferences among non-student adult subjects. Our data also reject the more specific hypothesis that approval-seeking subjects are the ones most likely to select into experiments. Finally, we observe a large difference between self-selected college students and self-selected adults: the students appear considerably less pro-social.
Year of publication: |
2012
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Authors: | Nosenzo, D ; Anderson, Jon ; Burks, Stephen V ; Carpenter, Jeffrey ; Gotte, Lorenz ; Maurer, Karsten ; Potter, Ruth ; Rocha, Kim ; Rustichini, Aldo |
Institutions: | Centre for Decision Research and Experimental Economics (CeDEx), School of Economics |
Subject: | methodology | selection bias | laboratory experiment | field experiment | other regarding behavior | social preferences | prisoner's dilemma | truckload | trucker |
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freely available