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Last Published June 03, 2020 06:48 AM July 27, 2023 07:53 AM
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Paper Abstract The frustration-aggression hypothesis posits that anger affects economic behaviour essentially by temporally changing individual social preferences and specifically attitudes towards punishment. Here, we test a different channel in an experiment where we externally induce anger to a subgroup of participants (following a standard procedure that we verify by using a novel method of textual analysis). We show that anger can impair the capacity to think strategically in a beauty-contest game, in a pre-registered experiment. Angry participants choose numbers further away from the best response level and earn significantly lower profits. Using a finite mixture model, we show that anger increases the number of level-zero players by 9 percentage points, a percentage increase of more than . Furthermore, with a second pre-registered experiment, we show that this effect is not common to all negative emotions. Sad participants do not play significantly further away from the best response level than the control group and sadness does not lead to more level-zero play.
Paper Citation Alessandro Castagnetti, Eugenio Proto, Andis Sofianos, Anger impairs strategic behavior: A Beauty-Contest based analysis, Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, Volume 213, 2023, Pages 128-141, ISSN 0167-2681, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2023.06.027. (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167268123002330) Keywords: Anger; Induced emotions; Strategic interactions; Beauty-contest
Paper URL https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2023.06.027
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