2012
DOI: 10.1628/093245612799440032
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Framing Contracts: Why Loss Framing Increases Effort

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Cited by 32 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…In both settings, we find that performance is statistically indistinguishable between bonus and penalty frames. The absence of a contract framing effect when the target is announced is consistent with the findings of Brooks et al (2012), DellaVigna andPope (2016), andGrolleau et al (2016). However, our finding that performance is unresponsive to framing when the target is unannounced contrasts with results reported by Hannan et al (2005), Armantier and Boly (2015), and Imas et al (2017).…”
supporting
confidence: 89%
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“…In both settings, we find that performance is statistically indistinguishable between bonus and penalty frames. The absence of a contract framing effect when the target is announced is consistent with the findings of Brooks et al (2012), DellaVigna andPope (2016), andGrolleau et al (2016). However, our finding that performance is unresponsive to framing when the target is unannounced contrasts with results reported by Hannan et al (2005), Armantier and Boly (2015), and Imas et al (2017).…”
supporting
confidence: 89%
“…1 (right panel) also shows that three further studies found considerably smaller effects, which are either statistically insignificant (DellaVigna and Pope 2016; Grolleau et al 2016), or only marginally significant (Brooks et al 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 77%
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“…In their study, Brooks, Stremitzer, and Tontrup (2012) take some steps in this direction. In this short comment I will follow their approach and discuss some of the possible reasons why the framing of otherwise identical contracts can have an influence on workers' behavior.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%