jolly good, perhaps prospective CEOs should be scanned
chris macrae [EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.valuetrue.com
- Original Message -
From: john hull [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 18 July 2002 17:03 PM
Subject: New article on cooperation the brain
Just published today
The news release mentions that they played a prisoner's dilemma game and
that all of the subjects were women. It did not say exactly what the
payoffs were but they were awarded money.
The article also said:
Mutual cooperation was the most common outcome in games played with
presumed human
When I play the prisoner's dilemma in class, I see very little cooperation.
I know one researcher who has repeated a trust game (not prisoner's
dilemma) with many classes of students and groups of business men.
He finds that students are remarkably untrustworthy and businessmen
tend to give
In a message dated 7/18/02 4:36:44 PM Central Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
When I play the prisoner's dilemma in class, I see very little cooperation.
I know one researcher who has repeated a trust game (not prisoner's
dilemma) with many classes of students and groups of business
--- Cyril Morong [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Maybe I am running the game wrong somehow and that is
why I get little cooperation.
Are you teaching on the West Coast?! Just kidding.
(Maybe not entirely*) I recall from my psych days
that a notable thing about the prisoner's dilemma is
that
--- fabio guillermo rojas
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I wouldn't be surprised if there were a similar
difference when you P.D. Can anybody confirm or reject
this claim about students?
I'm awfully sorry, what does P.D. mean?
Thanks,
jsh
__
Do You
The part about students being socially isolated from each other and lacking
social experienceis interesting. Are there any studies that might confirm
this? I teach at a community college, so the students probabl mix with each
other less than they do at other colleges. If I recall