Publication | Open Access
Peers at work: Evidence from the lab
19
Citations
20
References
2018
Year
Social PsychologyProject ManagementPeer RelationshipWork OrganizationSocial InfluenceLab ExperimentSimple Production TaskOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesProductivityCollective Action ProblemManagementExperimental EconomicsOrganizational PsychologyBehavioral SciencesWorkforce ProductivityApplied Social PsychologyPeer EffectsOrganizational CommunicationBusinessWork Group DynamicRemote Collaboration
This paper reports the results of a lab experiment designed to study the role of observability for peer effects in the setting of a simple production task. In our experiment, participants in the role of workers engage in a team real-effort task. We vary whether they can observe, or be observed by, one of their co-workers. In contrast to earlier findings from the field, we find no evidence that low-productivity workers perform better when they are observed by high-productivity co-workers. Instead, our results imply that peer effects in our experiment are heterogeneous, with some workers reciprocating a high-productivity co-worker but others taking the opportunity to free ride.
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