An Experimental Comparison between Self- and Third-Party Evaluations ()
ABSTRACT
How to pick up the true
meaning of messages exchanged in the laboratory is an important issue for
experimental research. The present study investigates, by experimentally
comparing self- and third-party evaluations, to what extent self-evaluations by
message receivers can be relied on. After standard public-good game, subjects
receive a free-form written message evaluating their decision and self-evaluate its content from their counterparts. Third-party evaluators also evaluate the
content independently. A comparison between both evaluations shows that a
significant proportion of them agree. Firm evidence of a self-serving bias cannot
be found.
Share and Cite:
Kumakawa, T. (2015) An Experimental Comparison between Self- and Third-Party Evaluations.
Theoretical Economics Letters,
5, 453-457. doi:
10.4236/tel.2015.54053.
Cited by
No relevant information.