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Between Joy and Sympathy: Smiling and Sad Recipient Faces Increase Prosocial Behavior in the Dictator Game

Martin Weiß, Grit Hein, Johannes Hewig

2021International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In human interactions, the facial expression of a bargaining partner may contain relevant information that affects prosocial decisions. We were interested in whether facial expressions of the recipient in the dictator game influence dictators’ behavior. To test this, we conducted an online study (n = 106) based on a modified version of a dictator game. The dictators allocated money between themselves and another person (recipient), who had no possibility to respond to the dictator. Importantly, before the allocation decision, the dictator was presented with the facial expression of the recipient (angry, disgusted, sad, smiling, or neutral). The results showed that dictators sent more money to recipients with sad or smiling facial expressions and less to recipients with angry or disgusted facial expressions compared with a neutral facial expression. Moreover, based on the sequential analysis of the decision and the interaction partner in the preceding trial, we found that decision-making depends upon previous interactions.

Topics & Concepts

SympathyProsocial behaviorDictator gamePsychologySocial psychologyDictatorPolitical scienceLawPoliticsPsychology of Moral and Emotional JudgmentBullying, Victimization, and AggressionPersonality Traits and Psychology
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