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Exploring the Links between Trait Mindfulness and Emotional and Behavioral Responses in the Ultimatum Game: Study 1

Behavioural experiment included in: Van der Schans, K.L., Kiggen, M., Tziafetas, K., Holland, R.W., & Karremans, J.C. (2022).

Participants are asked to partake in an Ultimatum Game. . Participants receive the offer of 1 out of 20 through 10 out of 20 credits split (randomized) and they are asked to either accept or reject the offer (see paper for more detailed descriptions). Afterwards participants fill out questionnaires regarding their trait mindfulness and other personality characteristics that lay outside the scope of the paper.

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Demographics

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End Experiment_

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Mindfulness

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Five facets mindfulness questionnaire (Baer et al., 2006). This questionnaire measures participants trait mindfulness.

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Ultimatum Game

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Participants played ten rounds of the Ultimatum Game (Güth et al., 1983). They were told that they were playing against other participants online and that by a random draw they were in the position of the receiver. In reality, the proposals were a predetermined and a randomized set of splits of twenty credits (1:19, 2:18, 3:17, 4:16, 5:15, 6:14, 7:13, 8:12, 9:11, 10:10 of which the first number was offered towards the participant). Within each trial, participants were offered one of these splits, and asked whether they accepted or rejected this offer (see Figure 1). Participants were told that if they accepted the offer, both parties received the proposed credits; if they rejected the offer, both parties received nothing.

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Conducted at Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University Nijmegen
Published on 13 June 2022
Corresponding author Kim Lien van der Schans PhD Student
Department of Social Sciences
Radboud University Nijmegen