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Financial incentives do not pave the road to good experimentation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 November 2001

Tilmann Betsch
Affiliation:
Psychological Institute, University of Heidelberg, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germanytilmann.betsch@urz.uni-hd.desusanne_haberstroh@psi-sv2.psi.uni-heidelberg.de www.psychologie.uni-heidelberg.de/AE/sozps/tb/TB_home.html www.psychologie.uni-heidelberg.de/AE/sozps/SHengl.html
Susanne Haberstroh
Affiliation:
Psychological Institute, University of Heidelberg, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germanytilmann.betsch@urz.uni-hd.desusanne_haberstroh@psi-sv2.psi.uni-heidelberg.de www.psychologie.uni-heidelberg.de/AE/sozps/tb/TB_home.html www.psychologie.uni-heidelberg.de/AE/sozps/SHengl.html
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Abstract

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Hertwig and Ortmann suggest paying participants contingent upon performance in order to increase the thoroughness they devote to a decision task. We argue that monetary incentives can yield a number of unintended effects including distortions of the subjective representation of the task and impaired performance. Therefore, we conclude that performance-contingent payment should not be generally employed in judgment and decision research.

Type
Brief Report
Copyright
© 2001 Cambridge University Press