People making deontological judgments in the Trapdoor dilemma are perceived to be more prosocial in economic games than they actually are

Article


Capraro, V., Sippel, J., Zhao, B., Hornischer, L., Savary, M., Terzopoulou, Z., Faucher, P. and Griffioen, S. 2018. People making deontological judgments in the Trapdoor dilemma are perceived to be more prosocial in economic games than they actually are. PLoS ONE. 13 (10). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0205066
TypeArticle
TitlePeople making deontological judgments in the Trapdoor dilemma are perceived to be more prosocial in economic games than they actually are
AuthorsCapraro, V., Sippel, J., Zhao, B., Hornischer, L., Savary, M., Terzopoulou, Z., Faucher, P. and Griffioen, S.
ContributorsBrañas-Garza, P.
Abstract

Why do people make deontological decisions, although they often lead to overall unfavorable outcomes? One account is receiving considerable attention: deontological judgments may signal commitment to prosociality and thus may increase people’s chances of being selected as social partners–which carries obvious long-term benefits. Here we test this framework by experimentally exploring whether people making deontological judgments are expected to be more prosocial than those making consequentialist judgments and whether they are actually so. In line with previous studies, we identified deontological choices using the Trapdoor dilemma. Using economic games, we take two measures of general prosociality towards strangers: trustworthiness and altruism. Our results procure converging evidence for a perception gap according to which Trapdoor-deontologists are believed to be more trustworthy and more altruistic towards strangers than Trapdoor-consequentialists, but actually they are not so. These results show that deontological judgments are not universal, reliable signals of prosociality.

KeywordsResearch Article, Biology and life sciences, Social sciences, Physical sciences, Research and analysis methods
PublisherPublic Library of Science
JournalPLoS ONE
ISSN1932-6203
Publication dates
Print11 Oct 2018
Publication process dates
Deposited12 Oct 2018
Accepted19 Sep 2018
Output statusPublished
Publisher's version
License
Copyright Statement

Copyright: © 2018 Capraro et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0205066
LanguageEnglish
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