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In an anonymous 4-person economic game, participants contributed more money to a common project (i.e., cooperated) when required to decide quickly than when forced to delay their decision (Rand, Greene & Nowak, 2012), a pattern consistent with the social heuristics

In an anonymous 4-person economic game, participants contributed more money to a common project (i.e., cooperated) when required to decide quickly than when forced to delay their decision (Rand, Greene & Nowak, 2012), a pattern consistent with the social heuristics hypothesis proposed by Rand and colleagues. The results of studies using time pressure have been mixed, with some replication attempts observing similar patterns (e.g., Rand et al., 2014) and others observing null effects (e.g., Tinghög et al., 2013; Verkoeijen & Bouwmeester, 2014). This Registered Replication Report (RRR) assessed the size and variability of the effect of time pressure on cooperative decisions by combining 21 separate, preregistered replications of the critical conditions from Study 7 of the original article (Rand et al., 2012). The primary planned analysis used data from all participants who were randomly assigned to conditions and who met the protocol inclusion criteria (an intent-to-treat approach that included the 65.9% of participants in the time- pressure condition and 7.5% in the forced-delay condition who did not adhere to the time constraints), and we observed a difference in contributions of −0.37 percentage points compared with an 8.6 percentage point difference calculated from the original data. Analyzing the data as the original article did, including data only for participants who complied with the time constraints, the RRR observed a 10.37 percentage point difference in contributions compared with a 15.31 percentage point difference in the original study. In combination, the results of the intent-to-treat analysis and the compliant-only analysis are consistent with the presence of selection biases and the absence of a causal effect of time pressure on cooperation.

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    • Registered Replication Report: Rand, Greene, & Nowak
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    Date Created
    2017-03-01
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    • Multilab direct replication of: Study 7 from Rand, D. G., Greene, J. D., & Nowak, M. A. (2012). Spontaneous giving and calculated greed. Nature, 489, 427–430. Protocol vetted by: David Rand Protocol and manuscript edited by: Daniel Simons
    • Thanks to the American Psychological Society (APS) and the Arnold Foundation who provided funding to participating laboratories to defray the costs of running the study. Thanks to David Rand for providing materials and helping to ensure the accuracy of the protocol. Thanks to Edison Choe for coding the analysis scripts and to Courtney Soderberg at the Center for Open Science for verifying their accuracy.
    • Full protocol, dataset, analysis scripts, materials from participating labs, and preregistration materials are available on the Open Science Framework - https://osf.io/scu2f/, opens in a new window

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    S. Bouwmeester, P. P. J. L. Verkoeijen, B. Aczel, F. Barbosa, L. Bègue, P. Brañas-Garza, T. G. H. Chmura, G. Cornelissen, F. S. Døssing, A. M. Espín, A. M. Evans, F. Ferreira-Santos, S. Fiedler, J. Flegr, M. Ghaffari, A. Glöckner, T. Goeschl, L. Guo, O. P. Hauser, R. Hernan-Gonzalez, A. Herrero, Z. Horne, P. Houdek, M. Johannesson, L. Koppel, P. Kujal, T. Laine, J. Lohse, E. C. Martins, C. Mauro, D. Mischkowski, S. Mukherjee, K. O. R. Myrseth, D. Navarro-Martínez, T. M. S. Neal, J. Novakova, R. Pagà, T. O. Paiva, B. Palfi, M. Piovesan, R.-M. Rahal, E. Salomon, N. Srinivasan, A. Srivastava, B. Szaszi, A. Szollosi, K. Ø. Thor, G. Tinghög, J. S. Trueblood, J. J. Van Bavel, A. E. van ‘t Veer, D. Västfjäll, M. Warner, E. Wengström, J. Wills, C. E. Wollbrant. (2017). Registered replication report: Rand, Greene, & Nowak (2012). Perspectives on Psychological Science, 12, 527-542. doi: 10.1177/1745691617693624

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