Competition and moral behavior: A meta-analysis of forty-five crowd-sourced experimental designs

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Documents

  • Fulltext

    Final published version, 1.8 MB, PDF document

  • Author collaboration many designs

Does competition affect moral behavior? This fundamental question has been debated among leading scholars for centuries, and more recently, it has been tested in experimental studies yielding a body of rather inconclusive empirical evidence. A potential source of ambivalent empirical results on the same hypothesis is design heterogeneity—variation in true effect sizes across various reasonable experimental research protocols. To provide further evidence on whether competition affects moral behavior and to examine whether the generalizability of a single experimental study is jeopardized by design heterogeneity, we invited independent research teams to contribute experimental designs to a crowd-sourced project. In a large-scale online data collection, 18,123 experimental participants were randomly allocated to 45 randomly selected experimental designs out of 95 submitted designs. We find a small adverse effect of competition on moral behavior in a meta-analysis of the pooled data. The crowd-sourced design of our study allows for a clean identification and estimation of the variation in effect sizes above and beyond what could be expected due to sampling variance. We find substantial design heterogeneity—estimated to be about 1.6 times as large as the average standard error of effect size estimates of the 45 research designs—indicating that the informativeness and generalizability of results based on a single experimental design are limited. Drawing strong conclusions about the underlying hypotheses in the presence of substantive design heterogeneity requires moving toward much larger data collections on various experimental designs testing the same hypothesis.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2215572120
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume120
Issue number23
Number of pages10
ISSN0027-8424
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2023

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS.For financial support,we thank the Austrian National Bank (grant 17788 to M. Kirchler),Austrian Science Fund (grants SFB F6307 to A.D.; SFB F6309 to J.H.; and SFB F6310 to M. Kirchler), Jan Wallander and Tom Hedelius Foundation (grant P21-0091 to A.D.),Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation (grant KAW 2018.0134 to A.D.), Marianne and Marcus Wallenberg Foundation (grant KAW2019.0434;toA.D.),RadboudUniversityNijmegen(grant2701437toU.W.), and Riksbankens Jubileumsfond (grant P21-0168 to M. Johannesson).

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2023 the Author(s).

    Research areas

  • competition, experimental design, generalizability, metascience, moral behavior

ID: 374863181