Social image in context: The role of social norms and social networks
通过在巴布亚新几内亚小规模社会进行田野实验,研究社会规范和社会网络关系如何影响社会形象效应的异质性,发现观察者的存在使行为向规范靠拢,且规范执行强度随社会距离、合作纽带和沟通网络中心性变化。
Social image effects are a common phenomenon, yet strongly heterogeneous across situations and people. We use a lab-in-the-field experiment in small-scale societies of Papua New Guinea to study the drivers of heterogeneity in social image effects, focusing on the roles of social norms and social network relationships. Participants played a dictator game, both, in private and in front of an observer. This data is accompanied by incentive-compatibly measured information on the social norm location and detailed social network data. First, we present causal evidence that social norms serve as reference points for social image effects, with participants’ behavior shifting toward the norm when observed. Second, our analysis reveals that the strength of norm enforcement depends on the participant-observer relationship. We find that norm enforcement is stronger when i) social distance increases, ii) cooperative ties weaken, and iii) observer centrality in communication networks decreases.