The differential effect of narratives
Narratives pervade almost any aspect of our life and play a particularly important role in moral and prosocial decision-making. We study how positive (stories in favor of a prosocial action) and negative (stories in favor of a selfish action) narratives influence prosocial behavior. Our main findings are that positive narratives increase giving substantially, especially for selfish types, compared to a baseline with no narratives. Negative narratives, on the other hand, have a differential effect. Prosocial types decrease their giving, while selfish types give more than in the baseline. We also find that positive
narratives lead to a binary response (comply or not comply), while negative narratives induce a more gradual trade-off.
Reference:
Fr-Motivated beliefs and motivated reasoning-1
Session:
Motivated beliefs and motivated reasoning
Presenter/s:
Eugenio Verrina
Room:
UCK, Room 115
Date:
Friday, 3 May
Time:
09:30 - 11:00
Session times:
09:30 - 11:00