
The Effect of Impression Formation on Rejection in the Ultimatum Game
Author(s) -
Yukari Jessica Tham,
Takaaki Hashimoto,
Kaori Karasawa
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
letters on evolutionary behavioral science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1884-927X
DOI - 10.5178/lebs.2021.83
Subject(s) - ultimatum game , social psychology , retributive justice , psychology , deterrence (psychology) , impression formation , economic justice , economics , social perception , microeconomics , criminology , perception , neuroscience
Previous studies have attempted to elucidate people’s motives for rejecting unfair offers in the ultimatum game. One approach assumes that people reject unfair offers to punish ill intentions behind the offers, motivated by retribution and/or deterrence. To disentangle these two motives and investigate when each motive drives rejection, we focused on people’s tendency to form moral impressions rapidly. We hypothesized that the deterrence motive would drive rejection when the negative impression of those who have made unfair offers is uncertain, while the retribution motive would drive rejection when the impression is certain. The result of an online experiment (N = 199) of a repeated mini-ultimatum game did not support our hypothesis; the certainty of the negative impression did not have significant effects on rejection of unfairness. We discuss the implications of this result, incorporating the results of exploratory analyses regarding self-reported motives.