Estimating the age-, gender-, and race-conditional probability of developing and dying from proximal and distal colorectal adenocarcinoma (CRAc)

2001 ◽  
Vol 120 (5) ◽  
pp. A229-A229
Author(s):  
I PELEG ◽  
G RUSHTON ◽  
A BANERJEE
Author(s):  
Laura Mieth ◽  
Raoul Bell ◽  
Axel Buchner

Abstract. The present study serves to test how positive and negative appearance-based expectations affect cooperation and punishment. Participants played a prisoner’s dilemma game with partners who either cooperated or defected. Then they were given a costly punishment option: They could spend money to decrease the payoffs of their partners. Aggregated over trials, participants spent more money for punishing the defection of likable-looking and smiling partners compared to punishing the defection of unlikable-looking and nonsmiling partners, but only because participants were more likely to cooperate with likable-looking and smiling partners, which provided the participants with more opportunities for moralistic punishment. When expressed as a conditional probability, moralistic punishment did not differ as a function of the partners’ facial likability. Smiling had no effect on the probability of moralistic punishment, but punishment was milder for smiling in comparison to nonsmiling partners.


PsycCRITIQUES ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Carol A. Gosselink
Keyword(s):  

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