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Mariana Blanco

Researcher at Del Rosario University

Publications -  35
Citations -  1811

Mariana Blanco is an academic researcher from Del Rosario University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Experimental economics & Reciprocity (social psychology). The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 35 publications receiving 1668 citations. Previous affiliations of Mariana Blanco include Royal Holloway, University of London.

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A Within-Subject Analysis of Other-Regarding Preferences

TL;DR: The model seems to capture various behavioral motives in different games but the correlation of these motives is low within subjects, and it is found that within-subject tests can differ markedly from aggregate-level analyses.
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A within-subject analysis of other-regarding preferences

TL;DR: This paper assess the predictive power of a model of other-regarding preferences (inequality aversion) using a within-subject design using four different games (ultimatum game, dictator game, sequential-move prisoners dilemma and public-good game) with the same sample of subjects.
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Belief Elicitation in Experiments: Is There a Hedging Problem?

TL;DR: This article proposed an experimental design that eliminates hedging opportunities, and used this to test for the empirical relevance of hedging effects in the lab, and found no evidence for hedging, comparing the standard "hedging-prone" belief elicitation treatment to a 'hedgingproof' design in a sequential prisoners' dilemma game.
Journal ArticleDOI

Belief elicitation in experiments: is there a hedging problem?

TL;DR: This paper proposed an experimental design that theoretically eliminates hedging opportunities and test for the empirical relevance of hedging effects in the lab, finding that hedging confounds are not a major problem unless hedging opportunity are very prominent.
Posted Content

Preferences and Beliefs in a Sequential Social Dilemma: A Within-Subjects Analysis

TL;DR: It is found that when first movers know the true probability of second-mover cooperation, subjects' own second moves still have predictive power regarding their first moves, suggesting that the direct channel also plays a role.