Title: Armin Falk and Bernd Weber
1Neuroeconomics Part I Introduction
- Armin Falk and Bernd Weber
- Universität Bonn, SS 08
2Overview
- Introduction
- Methods
- Neuroanatomy - macro- and microanatomy of the
human brain - Visit the Institute of Anatomy
- Neurophysiology - how neurons communicate
- Methods of cognitive neuroscience (EEG, fMRI,
PET, MEG....) - Visit LifeBrain - NeuroCognition Lab
- Important neuroeconomics papers (see below)
3Papers (to be completed)
- The Neural Basis of Economic Decision-Making in
the Ultimatum Game Alan G. Sanfey, James K.
Rilling,Jessica A. Aronson, Leigh E. Nystrom,
Jonathan D. Cohen, Science 13 June 2003, vol.
300. no. 5626, pp. 1755 - 1758 - Getting to Know You Reputation and Trust in a
Two-Person Economic Exchange, Brooks King-Casas,
Damin Tomlin, Cedric Anen, Colin F. Camerer,
Steven R. Quartz, P. Read Montague, Science,
2005, vol. 308, pp. 78-83. - Neuroeconomics How Neuroscience Can Inform
Economics, Colin F. Camerer, George Loewenstein,
Drazen Prelec, Journal of Economic Literature,
2005, vol. 43, 9-64. - Neuroeconomics Why economics needs brains, Colin
F. Camerer, George Loewenstein, Drazen Prelec,
Scandinavian Journal of Economics, 2004, vol.
106, no. 3, 555-79. - Oxytocin increases Trust in Humans, Michael
Kosfeld, Markus Heinrichs, Paul Zak, Urs
Fischbacher and Ernst Fehr, Nature 435, 2 June
2005, 673-676. - The Neural Basis of Altruistic Punishment,
Dominique J.-F. de Quervain, Urs Fischbacher,
Valerie Treyer, Melanie Schellhammer, Ulrich
Schnyder, Alfred Buck, Ernst Fehr, Science 305,
27 August 2004, 1254-1258. - Strategizing in the Brain, Colin F. Camerer,
Science, 2003, vol. 300, pp. 1673-75. - Social Comparison Affects Reward-Related Brain
Activity in the Human Ventral Striatum, K.
Fliessbach, B. Weber, P. Trautner, T. Dohmen, U.
Sunde, C. E. Elger, A. Falk, Science, 2007, Vol.
318, Issue 5854, 1305 1308. - Unfair pay and Stress, Falk, Menrath, Kupio and
Siegrist, Discussion paper.
4What is Neuroeconomics?
- General Neuroeconomics combines methods from
neuroscience and economics to better understand
how the human brain generates decisions in social
and economic contexts - Marriage of neuroscience methods with
experimental economics methods - Definition (Laibson) Neuroeconomics is the study
of the biological microfoundations of economic
cognition. - Biological microfoundations are neurochemical
mechanisms, like brain systems, neurons, genes,
heart rate, skin resistance, and
neurotransmitters. - Economic cognition includes mental
representations, emotions, expectations,
learning, memory, preferences, decision-making,
and behavior.
5Neuroeconomists
- About 100-200 neuroscientists and economists are
actively working in this new field. - Its roughly an even mix.
- This is in contrast to behavioral economics,
where its a one-sided game (mostly economists
and very few psychologists).
6Neuroeconomics Behavioral Economics
- Behavioral economics developed alternative models
of economic behavior. - Prospect theory, hyperbolic discounting, learning
models. - Fairness and reciprocity models.
- These models are black box models. They aim to
predict behavior better but there is no ambition
to understand the minds internal processes that
generate the behavior. - Questions
- Are components of behavioral models represented
in brain structures? - Can insights into how the brain works improve
economic modeling? - Can those insights discriminate between
alternative models?
7Why is Neuroeconomics so fascinating?
- Brain research has made great progress during the
past decade, largely due to noninvasive
techniques that allow observing the brain while
it is active. - Systematic study of the relation between behavior
and brain processes in healthy human subjects is
possible. - Possible to provide brain evidence for standard
economic theory, allows deeper understanding of
(behavioral) economics results - Provide genuinely new insight into the
neurobiological determinants of human behavior - and this is genuinely interesting and exciting in
itself
8What is the goal of neuroeconomics? Analogy to
organizational economics (Camerer EJ 2007)
- Until 1970s theory of the firm was a radically
reduced form model of how capital and labor are
combined to produce output. This model neglects - principal-agent relations
- Gift exchange
- Efficiency wages
- Hierarchy and authority
- Communication networks
- Etc
- Nevertheless a useful simplification for deriving
industry supply curves and doing macroeconomics - but clearly inapproapriate for a host of
interesting questions
9Opening the black box of the firmContract theory
10Opening the black box of the human
brainNeuroeconomics (See Camerer 2007)
11Brain evidence provides a deeper understanding of
behavioral economics results
- Are social preference phenomena better modelled
as preferences or as bounded rationality? - One possibility to answer this question is to
examine whether the brains reward mechanisms are
activated if people make other-regarding choices - Example ultimatum game
12Neural Basis of Responder Behavior in the
Ultimatum Game(A. G. Sanfey, J. K. Rilling, J.
A. Aronson, L. E. Nystrom, J. D. Cohen, Science12
13 March 03)
- Responders brain activations are measured by
fMRI in a 10 UG. - A responder faces each of three conditions ten
times. - Offers from a (supposed) human partner
- Random offers from a computer partner
- Money offer (there is no proposer here)
- Research Questions Which brain areas are more
activated when subjects face - fair offers (3-5) relative to unfair offers
(1-2). - the offer of a human proposer relative to a
random computer offer. - Method (very simplified)
- Regression of activity in every voxel (i.e, 3D
Pixel) in the brain on the treatment dummy (i.e.,
unfair offer dummy, human proposer dummy)
13Details of the Experiment
14Differences in brain activity between unfair and
fair offers from a human proposer
dorsolateral prefrontal cortex.
Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex.
Bilateral anterior insula and anterior cingulate
cortex.
- What you see Image of voxelwise t-statistic
(red) is overlaid on top of a structural brain
image (gray).
15Results
- Regions showing stronger activations if subjects
face unfair human offers relative to fair human
offers (the same regions also show more
activation if the unfair human offer is compared
to unfair random offers). - Bilateral anterior Insula, anterior cingulate
Cortex - Emotion-related region
- Insula also has been associated with negative
emotions such as disgust and anger. - Dorsolateral prefrontal Cortex (DLPFC)
- Cognition-related region
- Associated with control of execution of actions
- Associated with achievement of goals.
- Unfair offers are more likely to be rejected if
insula activation is stronger.
16Insula activation is related to unpleasantness
- Higher for offer of unfair person.
- Higher for more unfair offers.
- Higher for people who reject. (unclear Is
activation the cause of rejection or a byproduct?)
17General procedure
- Observe subjects brains when they are in a
decision situation. - Find the voxels which are particularly active in
particular situations. - For example Unfair vs. fair offers by humans.
- Interpret the observed activations by relating
the results to studies that observe activations
in the same brain regions. (Should be done ex
ante.) - Relate the observed brain activation with
behavior.
18What does this procedure rely on?
- Brain regions are functionally specialized. At
least, brain functions are not homogeneously
distributed across the brain. - Working parts of the brain show some kind of
activity. - This activity is measured with fMRI.
19-
- Neuroscience Methods
- Topics in Neuroeconomics
- Preferences
- Decision-making under risk and uncertainty
- Game theory and social preferences
20Revealed preferences
- Economists early doubts about the rationality of
choice (see quote) - But fear that unstable and unrational complex
(emotions, instincts, impulses,) of influences
underlying human choice cannot be measured
directly - Economic approach revealed preference theory
- Crucial assumption unobserved utilities are
revealed by observable choices - Breakthroughs in neuroscience feelings and
thoughts can be measured directly
21A Timeline of Neuroscience (Methods)Ward (2006)
- Phrenology (Gall, Spurtzheim)
- Nerve cell described (Purkinje 1837)
- Lesion patients (Broca 1861), functional
localization - Electric current in dog cortex causes movement
(Fritsch, Hitzig 1870) - EEG (Berger, 1929)
- Action potential (Hodgkin Huxley, 1938), single
cell rec. - CT (Hounsfield, 1973), MRI (Lauterbur,1973),
imaging - PET (Reivich et al., 1979), measure blood flow
- TMS (Barker et al.,1985), noninvasive stimulation
- fMRI (Ogawa et al., 1990), measure BOLD
1800 1820 1840 1860 1880 1900 1920 1940 1960 1980
2000
22Research with human subjects
- Studying humans with lesions
- Associated deficits provide information about the
function of the lesioned brain area. - Observing the brain
- indirect measures (psychophysiological
measurements as skin conductance, heart rate) - Brain Imaging (EEG, PET, fMRI)
- Pupil dilation -gt mental effort
- Blood pressure, heart rate, skin conductance -gt
anxiety - Stimulating the brain
- Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation TMS
- Enables a controlled, spatially and temporally
limited, stimulation or inhibition of brain
areas. - Psychopharmacological interventions
- Manipulation of neurotransmitter systems or
hormone systems.
23Lesion studies
- Naturally occurring lesions
- Accident, stroke, brain tumor.
- Allows to determine that a particular function is
processed independently from other functions. - Allows to determine causally that a particular
region is critical for the performance of a
particular task. - Problem
- It is often difficult to determine the affected
brain region
24Results gained with lesions
- Broca found an area that is critical for speech
production. - Humans with lesions of the amygdala lose
affective (i.e. emotional) meaning. - Hippocampus removal prevents experiences from
being encoded in long-term memory.
25Phineas Gage
- Explosion pushed iron up through the top of the
scull. - He survived.
- He was intellectually rather unaffected by the
accident. - He was unable to make reasonable decisions.
26Electro-encephalogram (EEG)
- Measures electrical potentials at the scull,
caused by neural activity. - Very good temporal resolution but poor spatial
resolution. - Large number of repetitions of the same situation
is necessary. - Interior brain activity is not directly recorded
- Further limits
- Eye movement creates also electric activity.
- In some regions neurons are not aligned and
activity can cancel out. - Not well suited for most economic experiments.
128 electrode array
27 Magnetoencephalograghy (MEG)
- Rather new method, based on measuring the
magnetic field generated by neural activity. - Advantages in comparison to EEG
- Signal unaffected by skull.
- Good spatial resolution (2-3 mm).
- Disadvantages in comparison to EEG
- Cannot detect signals from deeper brain
structures. - Expensive.
28Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
- A radioactive substance is injected into the
blood. - This substance emits positrons.
- These positrons decay, together with electrons.
- PET detects the brain area where this decay
occurs, i.e., it detects the areas into which the
radiation went. - Variants
- Glucose with radioactive fluorine.
- Water with radioactive oxygen measures blood
volume. - Better spatial but poorer temporal resolution
than EEG - Limited to short tasks
29fMRI (Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging)
- MRI is based on the principle that protons in a
magnetic field align with the field. If the
magnetic field is perturbed the direction of the
protons is disturbed. When the protons are
redirected in the magnetic field electromagnetic
radiation is emitted and is detected by the
scanner. - fMRI uses the fact that hemoglobin (red blood
cells) have different magnetic properties
depending on whether there is little or much
oxygen in the blood. - Increased neuronal activity in the brain uses up
oxygen such that initially the oxygen level in
the activated area falls later on the fall in
oxygen is overcompensated for when oxygen-rich
blood moves to the activated area. - BOLD-Signal (blood oxygen level dependent signal).
30Temporal resolution of fMRI
- Blood flow has a laggedresponse to neural
activity.(Hemodynamic response function HRF) - Does still allow relatively good temporal
resolutionbecause HRF is known. - Shortest stimuli that have been detected with
fMRI - Blamire et al. (1992) 2 sec
- Bandettini (1993) 0.5 sec
- Savoy et al (1995) 34 msec
31How is fMRI data analyzed (will be discussed
later)
- Behavioral analysis
- Preprocessing
- Motion correction
- Normalizing
- Smoothing
- Statistical maps
- Individual analysis Which voxels correlate with
the treatment, corrected for the homodynamic
response? - Group analysis Which voxels do so for many
people. - One has to take into account that multiple tests
are conducted (corrected and uncorrected
p-values). - Time course in regions of interests
(ROI-analysis).
32Block design and event related design
- Block design
- A experimental condition A is repeated several
times, then the condition B is repeated several
times, - Event related design
- The experimental conditions A and B are presented
on randomized order. - This is in particular the case, when the timing
of experimental conditions is determined
endogenously (free decision time). - Neuroeconomic experiments are usually event
related, because the stimulus should
unpredictable.
33Comparison of PET and fMRI
- Advantages of fMRI
- higher spatial resolution.
- higher temporal resolution.
- less invasive (no radioactivity).
- Advantages of PET
- Silent (auditory stimuli).
- Less movement artifacts when subjects speak.
- Sensitive to the whole brain. fMRI creates
artifacts' in the neighborhood of cranial
cavities (Schädelhöhle) (forehead, ear). - Fewer repetitions necessary.
- PET almost dominated by fMRI. Latter two point
are potentially relevant for economic experiments.
34Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS)
- Allows virtual lesions
- Non-invasive procedure debated
- A strong, magnetic impulse induces small currents
(Ströme) in the brain (cortex). - These currents create neural activity.
- Repeated stimulation at the same position can
increase or decrease how strongly neuron respond. - Temporally and spatially limited inhibition or
activation of the brain function.
35Pharmacological Methods
- Placebo controlled administration of substances
inform about the functioning of neurotransmitter
or hormone systems. - Neurotransmitter
- Dopamine, Serotonin, Noradrenalin
- Neurohormons
- Oxytocin
- Sexual hormons
- Testosterone, Estrogen
- Stress hormons
- Cortisol
36Other methods
- Single Neuron Measurement
- Implantation of electrodes into the brain
- While fMRI measures cumulative activity of
thousands of neurons, each electrode measures a
single neurons activity - Very invasive, therefore used on humans only if
neurosurgery inevitable due to epilepsy, and on
animals - Psychopathology
- Various illnesses have been associated with
specific brain areas, some illnesses progress
along a localized path in the brain - Chronic mental illnesses (schizophrenia),
degenerative diseases of the nervous system (PD),
developmental disorders (autism) - Inferences can be made about the role of specific
brain areas in brain functioning
37Overview of neuroscientific methods
38Animal research
- Many brain areas in humans and animals have
similar structures. - Its possible to produce addicted rats.
Addiction is created in that part of the brain
which we share with other mammals. - Learning.
- Decision taking in monkeys.
- Creating lesions and single cell recording (i.e.
measuring the electrical potentials of single
neurons) is possible in non-human primates but
not in healthy humans.
39Controlled lesions
- Allows to determine causally whether a particular
brain region (or connection between regions) is
essential for a particular function. - Examples
- Experimental destruction of both amygdalas in an
animal tames the animal, making it sexually
inactive and indifferent to danger like snakes or
other aggressive members of its own species. - Knocking out the gene that makes a key protein
for amygdala function makes rats relatively
fearless.
40Topics in Neuroeconomics PreferencesThe
following is taken from the Camerer et al. paper
Neuroeconomics Why Economics Needs Brains
(Camerer, Loewenstein, Prelec, 2004,
Scandinavian Journal of Economics)
- Revealed preference approach cannot tell the
whole story - Al and Naucia both refrain from buying peanuts at
a certain price - Common disutility?
- Al has a fatal allergy (inelastic demand) while
Naucia once simply ate too many peanuts (would be
willing to eat some again for a certain price) - Biological state-dependence vs. rational choice
- There is no low enough price to induce Al buying
peanuts - Tradeoff between sleep utility and risk of
plowing into a tree utility? - Dead sleeper with U(sleep)gtU(plowing into
tree)??? - Choice as a result from interaction of multiple
systems (automatic biological system, controlled
cognitive system)
41Preferences
- Preferences are state-dependent
- Whether I like having icecreme depends on the
season - Homeostasis (Gleichgewicht der Körperfunktion)
- Different types of utility
- Kahnemann remembered utility, anticipated
utility, choice utility, experienced utility - Different types do not always coincide
- in particular for rare but important decisions
- Contradictory to standard analysis of welfare,
which assumes that choices anticipate experience
perfectly - Examples compulsive shoppers (revealing choice
utility) buy stuff they dont use (experience
utility) children drug and addicts
(craving/wanting consumption/choosing not
pleasurable) - Presumption in neurosciences different types of
utility are produced in different brain regions
42Preferences
- Utility of money
- Economics People are expected to value money for
what it can purchase -gt indirect utility of
income - Neuroeconomic evidence suggests that money can be
directly rewarding -gt direct utility of income - Monetary rewards seem to activate the same brain
region (dopaminergic neurons in the midbrain)
that is active for a wide variety of rewarding
experiences - Possible explanation for why workaholics and very
wealthy people keep working even though the
marginal utility of goods purchased with their
marginal income is very low - Pain of paying..., credit cards or preference for
fixed payment plans rather than marginal-use
pricing
43Flat rates
- Many studies show that consumers choose flat
rates even though marginal use schemes would be
optimal, i.e., cost less (telephone, fitness
studio) - Explanations
- Risk aversion (knowing the cost vs. uncertain
cost) - Mental accounting and neuro perspective (pain of
paying), see, e.g., Prelec/Loewenstein (1998) - They ask Ss whether they enjoy using different
products more when paying flat rates or marginal
use schemes 48 percent prefer flat rate, only 19
percent prefer marginal use scheme (fitness
studio, phone, traffic etc.) - Laziness
- Overestimation effect (wrong subjective prob. of
using a particular good) - Commitment device
44Preferences
- Source of income
- Economics utility of income is independent of
its source - Neuroeconomic evidence earned money is more
rewarding than unearned money - Greater activity in the striatum (midbrain
region) for earned income (Zink et al 2004) - Implications for welfare and tax policies?
- Workfare vs. welfare
45What is better welfare or workfare?A little
digression
- Workfare programs introduced in several countries
- Unlike regular public assistance, workfare
requires recipients to spend time on mandatory
activities such as community work - Economic theory predicts that workfare increases
the incentive for benefit recipients to seek
regular employment, because the work requirement
reduces the attractiveness of being on public
assistance - However, workfare is often claimed to be unfair
- Can Neuroeconomics provide additional support?
46This study (Falk, Huffman and Mierendorff 2006)
- Study the incentive effects of workfare
- Assess potential political support/resistance
with respect to workfare - Explore motives behind voting for/against
workfare
471. Incentive effects
- Real effort task
- Task has no intrinsic value
- Experiment captures essential tradeoff between
effort cost and wage - Elicit reservation wages
48Count the number of zeros How many of these
would you do for X Euro?
Sheet 1
49Phases of the experiment
- Phase 1 try the task
- Phase 2 choice tables
- Subjects fill in choice tables
- Phase 3 work/payment
- Subjects are paid and leave the lab, if on
welfare - Subjects work if employed or on workfare
- Paid and allowed to leave as soon as they are done
50Example choice table
welfare
regular job
51Example choice table
regular job
workfare
52Work outcomes and payment
- Subjects know how outcomes are determined
- One row in one table is randomly selected
- Subjects choice for that row is implemented
- e.g. 4 Euros and leave the lab immediately
- or, 6 Euros after completing 5 sheets
- Incentive compatible
- Payment conditional on completing required
sheets receive money and leave when finished
53Results
Incentive effects are significant 5
sheets (plt.0001) 10 sheets (plt.0051) Wilcoxon
Rank test.
Euro
542. Political Acceptability
- To what extent do people support workfare?
- What are their motives?
- We study this in a setting where some
individuals, type A, must work and pay taxes to
support individuals on welfare. - Other individuals, type B, choose whether to
work, or to go on welfare and collect money from
the As. - Before Ss know their roles, they vote on whether
or not to attach a work requirement to welfare
benefits - Voting behind the veil of ignorance
55Phases of the experiment
- Voting
- Ss are assigned to groups of 3
- Each group consists of two A and one B
- As will potentially earn 6 Euros for 10 sheets,
or only 4 Euros if B does not work (welfare
support) - Ss vote whether to impose a work requirement, if
B chooses not to work - Types are revealed and Bs make a choice
- Work, and earn 6 Euros by doing 10 sheets
- Receive 4 Euros from the As, potentially for 0
sheets - Work and payment
- Ss on welfare are paid and leave immediately
- Ss who are employed, or on workfare, begin work
- Ss are paid and can leave as soon as they have
completed the required task units
56Summary of possible outcomes
57Is Workfare Fair?
58Substantial support for workfare
All groups implement workfare among 23
B-players, 20 choose regular job
59Why do people support workfare?
Self Interest 16
Both 15
Social Motives 56
Categorized responses to free-form
questions. Self-interest workfare gives B an
incentive to work. Social motives inequity
aversion, fairness, reciprocity
60Conclusions/end of digression
- Workfare has the predicted impact on reservation
wages - We find substantial support for workfare
(importance of fairness) - Neuroeconomics relevant?
- Revenge is sweet (people like to punish
defectors, see deQuervain 2006) may be one
reason why people vote in favor of workfare - People are better off if they receive money as a
return for working (Zink et al. 2004)
61Preferences
- Addiction
- Models of rational addiction current utility
depends on a stock of previous consumption,
consumers understand the habit formation and
respond to future prices - The rational addict should buy drugs in large
quantities at discounted prices and self-ration
them - Is addition rational?
- Many addicts quit and relapse regularly
- Buy small packages struggle of two systems?
- Neuroeconomic evidence addictive substances seem
to initiate the reward mechanism in the old
part of the human brain - Substances also potentially addictive for rats
- No contradiction of rational model, but shows
that rational planning not necessary to create
addictive phenomena
62Decision-making under risk and uncertainty Risk
and ambiguity
- Economics risk is equated with variation of
outcomes one-dimensional - Neuroeconomic evidence risk has more than one
dimension - Potential catastrophic outcomes that are
difficult to control are perceived as more risky
(controlled for statistical likelihood) -gt fear
of flying - Driven (amongst others) by fear responses
(amygdala) - Ambiguity missing information about
probabilities people would like to know but dont - Activation of insula is different when people
choose certain money amounts compared to when
they choose ambiguous gambles (insula processes
information like physical pain, hunger, pain of
social exclusion,)
63Decision-making under risk and uncertainty Risky
choice
- Involves an interplay of cognitive and affective
processes - Experimental evidence
- Two groups of subjects normal subjects and
subjects with prefrontal cortex (PFC) damage
(i.e. a disconnection between cognitive and
affective system) - Subjects repeatedly had to draw cards from
different decks (different with respect to
expected value, range of outcome), learned the
composition of decks via trial-and-error. - Skin conductance reactions (fear) to large losses
identical among both groups - Normal subjects learned to avoid risky bad
decks while prefrontal-damage patients returned
to bad decks shortly after experienced losses - Imaging studies show that gains and losses
produce different levels of activation in
different regions of the brain - Support for prospect theory (Kahnemann/Tversky)
64Decision-making under risk and uncertainty
Gambling
- Economic puzzle people both demand insurance and
gamble at the same time - Including emotions and other neuroscientific
insights might help - Studies of pathological gamblers genetic
disposition mainly male - Blocking of opiate receptors in the brain reduces
the urge to gamble
65Game theory and social preferences
- Assumption among neuroscientists there is a
specialized mind-reading area in the human
brain, that controls reasoning about what others
believe and might do - Social preferences
- Cooperating subjects show increased activation in
Broadmann area 10 (mind reading area), autists
are assumed to have deficits in that area and
often have trouble figuring out what other people
think and believe - Sanfey, Rilling et al. fMRI study of ultimatum
bargaining see above
66Concluding remarks
- Neuroscience measurements offer more reliable and
unbiased data in many cases (e.g., compared to
certain survey data or self-reports) - Neuroeconomic research might give better insights
for example into consumption choices and
underlying mechanisms, nature of behavior
studying unobservable intermediate variables
(beliefs, utility) - Neuroscience can possibly show that economic
choices that are considered to be different in
economic theory but that use the same brain
circuitry (e.g., insula cortex is active when
subjects reject low offers in ultimatum game and
when choosing an ambiguous gamble) - Neuroscience can add precision to functions and
parameters in standard economic models
67Final comment
- Neuroeconomics is important and will stay if it
produces scientifically valuable knowledge - This is true irrespective of whatever notion
someone holds of what economics is about
68Unfair pay and Stress(Falk, Menrath, Kupio and
Siegrist, 2008)
- Does perceived unfair treatment induce stress?
- Important to understand nature of social
preferences - Negative emotions and stress caused by unfair
treatment are hypothesized to be a main reason
for reciprocation (Adams 1964, Fehr 1999, Falk
and Fischbacher 2006) reduced by the act of
reciprocation (see recent neuro-imaging evidence,
see beow) - Enhances our understanding of the effects of
income inequalities, which are widening in modern
western economies - Unfair pay may adversely affect work motivation,
well-being and health status of employees
(questionnaire studies, epidemiological studies)
69Health and the workplace
- Specific features at the workplace enhance or
reduce employees health through psychosocial
stress-related mechanisms - These features are related to firm organization,
modes of payment etc. - Hypothesis Effort-reward imbalance (unfairness)
at work increases the risk of stress-related
diseases (e.g. coronary heart disease,
depression) and health-adverse behaviors
(smoking, alcohol). - By the year 2020 depression and coronary heart
disease will be the leading causes of premature
death and of life years defined by disability ...
worldwide. (WHO and Murray and Lopez 1996)
70Design
- Stylized labor relation, one principal one agent
- Details of the experiment are all commonly known
- Agent produces revenue by working on a tedious
task - Counting zeros on sheets with zeros and ones
- 3 Euro for correct number 1 Euro for almost
correct number (deviation of plus/minus 1) zero
Euro otherwise - Agents work 25 minutes principals do not work at
all - Total revenue goes to the principal who allocates
it between himself and the agent - Before agent gets to know his share, he is asked
about a pay he would consider as appropriate - After agent is informed he has four minutes to
think about a letter he would write to his
principal - These four minutes are used to recorded heart
rate variability of agents (relative to baseline)
71Heart rate variability
- Heart rate variability has been chosen as a
physiological marker in our experiment because of
its sensitivity to recurrent experience of
emotional stress - Recent evidence from epidemiological
investigations indicates that HRV is an early
indicator of functional and structural
impairments of the cardiovascular system, which
increases the probability of future manifest
coronary heart disease - HRV is low if stress is high
72Three measures of unfairness
- Actual share payoff of agent/total revenue
- Discrepancy actual share/appropriate share
- Fairness on a 5-point Likert scale
73Results
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