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Do pain and effort increase prosocial contributions?: Revisiting the Martyrdom Effect with a Replication and extensions Registered Report of Olivola and Shafir (2013)use asterix (*) to get italics
Yim Tung (Emanuel) Cheng, Gilad FeldmanPlease use the format "First name initials family name" as in "Marie S. Curie, Niels H. D. Bohr, Albert Einstein, John R. R. Tolkien, Donna T. Strickland"
2024
<p>[IMPORTANT: Abstract, method, and results were written using a randomized dataset produced by Qualtrics to simulate what these sections will look like after data collection. These will be updated following the data collection. For the purpose of the simulation, we wrote things in past tense, but no pre-registration or data collection took place yet.]</p> <p><br>The Martyrdom Effect is the phenomenon that people donate more to charity when it involves personal effort or suffering. In a Registered Report experiment with a US American sample on Prolific (N = 1350), we conducted a replication of Experiments 3, 4, and 5 from Olivola and Shafir (2013). [The following is a demo placeholder based on the random simulated and will be updated following data collection.] We found support for the effects of [...] (effects + 95% CI). We found mixed support for the effect of [...] (effects + 95% CI). However, we failed to find support for the effects of [...] (effects + 95% CI). Extending the replication, we [found/failed to find] support for [...]. Overall, we concluded that [...]. Materials, data, and code are available on: <a href="https://osf.io/yu25a/">https://osf.io/yu25a/</a></p>
You should fill this box only if you chose 'All or part of the results presented in this preprint are based on data'. URL must start with http:// or https://
You should fill this box only if you chose 'Scripts were used to obtain or analyze the results'. URL must start with http:// or https://
You should fill this box only if you chose 'Codes have been used in this study'. URL must start with http:// or https://
effort, pain, Martyrdom Effect, charitable giving, donations, altruism
NonePlease indicate the methods that may require specialised expertise during the peer review process (use a comma to separate various required expertises).
Social sciences
No need for them to be recommenders of PCI Registered Reports. Please do not suggest reviewers for whom there might be a conflict of interest. Reviewers are not allowed to review preprints written by close colleagues (with whom they have published in the last four years, with whom they have received joint funding in the last four years, or with whom they are currently writing a manuscript, or submitting a grant proposal), or by family members, friends, or anyone for whom bias might affect the nature of the review - see the code of conduct
e.g. John Doe [john@doe.com]
2023-11-30 12:32:25
Rima-Maria Rahal
Liesbeth Mann, Vanessa Clemens