Highlights
- More and more often the partner in a decision is not another human but a machine.
- We find sharing a decision with a computer has an influence on human decisions.
- When decision makers decide on their own, the number of selfish choices is rather small.
- When the decision is shared with a computer the number of selfish choices increases.
- Humans behave quite similar when deciding with a computer than when deciding together with another human.
Humans make decisions jointly with others. They share responsibility for the outcome with their interaction partners.
Today, more and more often the partner in a decision is not another human but, instead, a machine.
Here we ask whether the type of the partner, machine or human, affects our responsibility, our perception of the choice and the choice itself. As a workhorse we use a modified dictator game with two joint decision makers: either two humans or one human and one machine.
We find no treatment effect on perceived responsibility or guilt. We also find only a small and insignificant effect on actual choices.
JEL classification: C91, D63, D80
Hazel’s comment
No difference between human interaction and machine? I find that a little surprising but I wasn’t the person running the trial.
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