2013
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2329468
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How Individual Preferences Get Aggregated in Groups - An Experimental Study

Abstract: This paper experimentally investigates how individual preferences, through unrestricted deliberation, get aggregated into a group decision in two contexts: reciprocating gifts, and choosing between lotteries. In both contexts we find that median group members have a significant impact on the group decision, but particular other members also have some influence. Non-median members closer to the median tend to have more influence than other members. By investigating the same individual's influence in different g… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(15 citation statements)
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References 66 publications
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“…Finally, the move toward more selfish team decisions can be partly explained by the fact that median team members make on average 27 less inequality averse initial proposals than the mean, at least for the α parameter (mean difference=0.110, p=0.064) if not for β (mean difference=-0.007, p=0.401). These results are consistent with those of Ambrus et al (2013).…”
Section: Notessupporting
confidence: 92%
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“…Finally, the move toward more selfish team decisions can be partly explained by the fact that median team members make on average 27 less inequality averse initial proposals than the mean, at least for the α parameter (mean difference=0.110, p=0.064) if not for β (mean difference=-0.007, p=0.401). These results are consistent with those of Ambrus et al (2013).…”
Section: Notessupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Fourth, the higher heterogeneity of team members in terms of guilt and envy increases the number of iterations until convergence. Consistent with Ambrus et al (2013), we find that in the aggregation process, individuals with median preferences drive the team decision, while selfish and more inequality averse individuals converge more slowly to the proposals made by the median members. Finally, if the guilt parameter predicts the advantaged team's behavior in the Production Game when choices are not anonymous, the envy parameter shows no predictive power in any configuration of this game.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 78%
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