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Gossip and the Efficiency of Interactions

Matthias Sutter and Dietmar Fehr

Working Papers from eSocialSciences

Abstract: Human communication in organizations often involves a large amount of gossiping about others. Here we study in an experiment whether gossip affects the efficiency of human interactions. We let subjects play a trust game. Third parties observe a trustee’s behavior and can gossip about it by sending a message to the trustor with whom the observed trustee will be paired (for the first time) in the next round. While messages are non-verifiable and sometimes also incorrect, the possibility of gossip is highly efficiency-increasing compared to a situation without any gossip. In two further control treatments, we show that the mere fact of being observed by third parties cannot explain the efficiency-increasing effect of gossip, and that noisy gossip (where information transmission from third parties to trustors can fail) still increases efficiency, but less so than if information transmission is undisturbed.

Keywords: human communication; gossip; efficiency; human interactions; third party; control treatment; noisy gossip; information transmission; trust game; efficiency; experiment (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2016-02
Note: Institutional Papers
References: Add references at CitEc
Citations: View citations in EconPapers (1)

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Related works:
Journal Article: Gossip and the efficiency of interactions (2019) Downloads
Working Paper: Gossip and the efficiency of interactions (2016) Downloads
Working Paper: Gossip and the Efficiency of Interactions (2016) Downloads
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