Delay, probability, and social discounting in a public goods game.

A human social discount function measures the value to a person of a reward to another person at a given social distance. Just as delay discounting is a hyperbolic function of delay, and probability discounting is a hyperbolic function of odds-against, social discounting is a hyperbolic function of social distance. Experiment 1 obtained individual social, delay, and probability discount functions for a hypothetical $75 reward; participants also indicated how much of an initial $100 endowment they would contribute to a common investment in a public good. Steepness of discounting correlated, across participants, among all three discount dimensions. However, only social and probability discounting were correlated with the public-good contribution; high public-good contributors were more altruistic and also less risk averse than low contributors. Experiment 2 obtained social discount functions with hypothetical $75 rewards and delay discount functions with hypothetical $1,000 rewards, as well as public-good contributions. The results replicated those of Experiment 1; steepness of the two forms of discounting correlated with each other across participants but only social discounting correlated with the public-good contribution. Most participants in Experiment 2 predicted that the average contribution would be lower than their own contribution.

[1]  Howard Rachlin,et al.  Behavior and Mind: The Roots of Modern Psychology , 1994 .

[2]  H. Rachlin Judgment, Decision, and Choice: A Cognitive/Behavioral Synthesis , 1989 .

[3]  W. Bickel,et al.  Toward a behavioral economic understanding of drug dependence: delay discounting processes. , 2001, Addiction.

[4]  A. Tversky,et al.  Prospect Theory : An Analysis of Decision under Risk Author ( s ) : , 2007 .

[5]  H. Rachlin Notes on discounting. , 2006, Journal of the experimental analysis of behavior.

[6]  Julian L. Simon Interpersonal Allocation Continuous with Intertemporal Allocation , 1995 .

[7]  L. Green,et al.  A discounting framework for choice with delayed and probabilistic rewards. , 2004, Psychological bulletin.

[8]  H. Rachlin Altruism and selfishness , 2002, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[9]  A. Tversky,et al.  Prospect theory: analysis of decision under risk , 1979 .

[10]  H. Rachlin,et al.  The effect of temporal constraints on the value of money and other commodities , 1993 .

[11]  G. Madden,et al.  Delay discounting of real and hypothetical rewards. , 2003, Experimental and clinical psychopharmacology.

[12]  L. Green,et al.  Discounting of Delayed Rewards: A Life-Span Comparison , 1994 .

[13]  A. Tversky Intransitivity of preferences. , 1969 .

[14]  G. Koob,et al.  What is addiction? , 2019, Introduction to Addiction.

[15]  J. Gibbon,et al.  Cognition and behavior in studies of choice , 1986 .

[16]  J. E. Mazur An adjusting procedure for studying delayed reinforcement. , 1987 .

[17]  R. Boyd,et al.  In Search of Homo Economicus: Behavioral Experiments in 15 Small- Scale Societies , 2001 .

[18]  Howard Rachlin,et al.  Social Discounting and Delay Discounting , 2008 .

[19]  L. Green,et al.  Area under the curve as a measure of discounting. , 2001, Journal of the experimental analysis of behavior.

[20]  H. Rachlin The Value of Temporal Patterns in Behavior , 1995 .

[21]  Colin Camerer Behavioral Game Theory: Experiments in Strategic Interaction , 2003 .

[22]  H. Rachlin,et al.  Social Discounting , 2006, Psychological science.