The following pages link to Incentives and cheating (Q523506):
Displaying 24 items.
- External validity of a laboratory measure of cheating: evidence from Czech juvenile detention centers (Q777651) (← links)
- Lies in disguise -- a theoretical analysis of cheating (Q1753692) (← links)
- Lying opportunities and incentives to Lie: reference dependence versus reputation (Q1792580) (← links)
- Cheating to win: dishonesty and the intensity of competition (Q2016007) (← links)
- Losing funds or losing face? Reputation and accountability in the credit rating industry (Q2098016) (← links)
- Individual cheating in the lab: a new measure and external validity (Q2157826) (← links)
- Does the die-under-the-cup device exaggerate cheating? (Q2158321) (← links)
- Bribing the Self (Q2178022) (← links)
- Does poverty negate the impact of social norms on cheating? (Q2212782) (← links)
- Dishonest behavior: sin big or go home (Q2292767) (← links)
- ``But everybody's doing it!'': a model of peer effects on student cheating (Q2422661) (← links)
- The incentive effect of a handicap (Q2444162) (← links)
- Honesty in tournaments (Q2453026) (← links)
- The influence of self and social image concerns on lying (Q2673217) (← links)
- It's not a lie if you believe the norm does not apply: conditional norm-following and belief distortion (Q2685844) (← links)
- Bad Boys: How Criminal Identity Salience Affects Rule Violation (Q4610746) (← links)
- Lying with heterogeneous image concerns (Q6047360) (← links)
- Unethical decision making and sleep restriction: experimental evidence (Q6176752) (← links)
- Commitment requests do not affect truth-telling in laboratory and online experiments (Q6188675) (← links)
- The impact of fraud on reputation systems (Q6494272) (← links)
- Should the government reward cooperation? Insights from an agent-based model of wealth redistribution (Q6497555) (← links)
- Who's the deceiver? Identifying deceptive intentions in communication (Q6565057) (← links)
- Signaling motives in lying games (Q6634127) (← links)
- Breaking bad: malfunctioning control institutions erode good behavior in a cheating game (Q6665673) (← links)