Locey Matthew L, Jones Bryan A, Rachlin Howard
Stony Brook University.
Judgm Decis Mak. 2011 Aug;6(6):552-564.
Laboratory studies of choice and decision making among real monetary rewards typically use smaller real rewards than those common in real life. When laboratory rewards are large, they are almost always hypothetical. In applying laboratory results meaningfully to real-life situations, it is important to know the extent to which choices among hypothetical rewards correspond to choices among real rewards and whether variation of the magnitude of hypothetical rewards affects behavior in meaningful ways. The present study compared real and hypothetical monetary rewards in two experiments. In Experiment 1, participants played a temporal discounting game that incorporates the logic of a repeated prisoner's-dilemma (PD) type game versus tit-for-tat; choice of one alternative ("defection" in PD terminology) resulted in a small-immediate reward; choice of the other alternative ("cooperation" in PD terminology) resulted in a larger reward delayed until the following trial. The larger-delayed reward was greater for half of the groups than for the other half. Rewards also differed in type across groups: multiples of real nickels, hypothetical nickels or hypothetical hundred-dollar bills. All groups significantly increased choice of the larger delayed reward over the 40 trials of the experiment. Over the last 10 trials, cooperation was significantly higher when the difference between larger and smaller hypothetical rewards was greater. Reward type (real or hypothetical) made no significant difference in cooperation. In Experiment 2, real and hypothetical rewards were compared in social discounting - the decrease in value to the giver of a reward as social distance increases to the receiver of the reward. Social discount rates were well described by a hyperbolic function. Discounting rates for real and hypothetical rewards did not significantly differ. These results add to the evidence that results of experiments with hypothetical rewards validly apply in everyday life.
在真实货币奖励中进行选择和决策的实验室研究通常使用比现实生活中常见的奖励更小的真实奖励。当实验室奖励金额较大时,它们几乎总是假设性的。在将实验室结果有意义地应用于现实生活情境时,了解在假设奖励之间的选择与在真实奖励之间的选择相符的程度,以及假设奖励大小的变化是否以有意义的方式影响行为,是很重要的。本研究在两个实验中比较了真实货币奖励和假设货币奖励。在实验1中,参与者玩了一个时间折扣游戏,该游戏融入了重复囚徒困境(PD)类型游戏与针锋相对策略的逻辑;选择一种替代方案(用PD术语来说是“背叛”)会带来小的即时奖励;选择另一种替代方案(用PD术语来说是“合作”)会带来更大的奖励,但会延迟到下一轮。对于一半的组来说,更大的延迟奖励比另一半组更大。不同组的奖励类型也不同:真实镍币的倍数、假设镍币或假设的百元大钞。在实验的40轮中,所有组对更大延迟奖励的选择都显著增加。在最后10轮中,当更大和更小的假设奖励之间的差异更大时,合作显著更高。奖励类型(真实或假设)在合作方面没有显著差异。在实验2中,在社会折扣中比较了真实奖励和假设奖励——随着给予者与奖励接受者之间的社会距离增加,奖励对给予者的价值会降低。社会折扣率可以用双曲线函数很好地描述。真实奖励和假设奖励的折扣率没有显著差异。这些结果进一步证明了使用假设奖励的实验结果在日常生活中是有效适用的。