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Dive into the research topics where Jaromír Kovářík is active.

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Featured researches published by Jaromír Kovářík.


Games and Economic Behavior | 2010

Altruism and Social Integration

Pablo Brañas-Garza; Ramón Cobo-Reyes; María Paz Espinosa; Natalia Jiménez; Jaromír Kovářík; Giovanni Ponti

We report on a two-stage experiment in which i) we first elicit the social network within a section of undergraduate students and ii) we then measure their altruistic attitudes by means of a standard Dictator game. We observe that more socially integrated subjects are also more altruistic, as betweenness centrality and reciprocal degree are positively correlated with the level of giving, even after controlling for framing and social distance, which have been shown to significantly affect giving in previous studies. Our findings suggest that social distance and social integration are complementary determinants of altruistic behavior.


Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience | 2015

Prosocial behavior and gender

María Paz Espinosa; Jaromír Kovářík

This study revisits different experimental data sets that explore social behavior in economic games and uncovers that many treatment effects may be gender-specific. In general, men and women do not differ in “neutral” baselines. However, we find that social framing tends to reinforce prosocial behavior in women but not men, whereas encouraging reflection decreases the prosociality of males but not females. The treatment effects are sometimes statistically different across genders and sometimes not but never go in the opposite direction. These findings suggest that (i) the social behavior of both sexes is malleable but each gender responds to different aspects of the social context; and (ii) gender differences observed in some studies might be the result of particular features of the experimental design. Our results contribute to the literature on prosocial behavior and may improve our understanding of the origins of human prosociality. We discuss the possible link between the observed differential treatment effects across genders and the differing male and female brain network connectivity, documented in recent neural studies.


Journal of Theoretical Biology | 2012

Limited memory can be beneficial for the evolution of cooperation

Gergely Horvath; Jaromír Kovářík; Friederike Mengel

In this study we analyze the effect of working memory capacity on the evolution of cooperation and show a case in which societies with strongly limited memory achieve higher levels of cooperation than societies with larger memory. Agents in our evolutionary model are arranged on a network and interact in a prisoners dilemma with their neighbors. They learn from their own experience and that of their neighbors in the network about the past behavior of others and use this information when making their choices. Each agent can only process information from her last h interactions. We show that if memory (h) is too short, cooperation does not emerge in the long run. A slight increase of memory length to around 5-10 periods, though, can lead to largely cooperative societies. Longer memory, on the other hand, is detrimental to cooperation in our model.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Natural disasters and indicators of social cohesion

Aitor Calo-Blanco; Jaromír Kovářík; Friederike Mengel; José Gabriel Romero

Do adversarial environmental conditions create social cohesion? We provide new answers to this question by exploiting spatial and temporal variation in exposure to earthquakes across Chile. Using a variety of methods and controlling for a number of socio-economic variables, we find that exposure to earthquakes has a positive effect on several indicators of social cohesion. Social cohesion increases after a big earthquake and slowly erodes in periods where environmental conditions are less adverse. Our results contribute to the current debate on whether and how environmental conditions shape formal and informal institutions.


Network Science | 2017

Digit ratio (2D:4D) and social integration: an effect of prenatal sex hormones

Jaromír Kovářík; Pablo Brañas-Garza; Michael W. Davidson; Dotan A. Haim; Shannon Carcelli; James H. Fowler

The position people occupy in their social and professional networks is related to their social status and has strong effects on their access to social resources. While attainment of particular positions is driven by behavioral traits, many biological factors predispose individuals to certain behaviors and motivations. Prior work on exposure to fetal androgens (measured by second-to-fourth digit ratio, 2D:4D) shows that it correlates with behaviors and traits related to social status, which might make people more socially integrated. However, it also predicts certain anti-social behaviors and disorders associated with lower socialization. We explore whether 2D:4D correlates with network position later in life and find that individuals with low 2D:4D become more central in their social environment. Interestingly, low 2D:4D males are more likely to exhibit high betweenness centrality (they connect separated parts of the social structure) while low 2D:4D females are more likely to exhibit high in-degree centrality (more people name them as friends). These gender-specific differences are reinforced by transitivity (the likelihood that one’s friends are also friends with one another): neighbors of low 2D:4D men tend not to know each other; the contrary is observed for low 2D:4D women. Our results suggest that biological predispositions influence the organization of human societies and that exposure to prenatal androgens influences different status seeking behaviors in men and women.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Second-to-Fourth Digit Ratio Has a Non-Monotonic Impact on Altruism

Pablo Brañas-Garza; Jaromír Kovářík; Levent Neyse


Physica A-statistical Mechanics and Its Applications | 2012

Prosocial norms and degree heterogeneity in social networks

Jaromír Kovářík; Pablo Brañas-Garza; Ramón Cobo-Reyes; María Paz Espinosa; Natalia Jiménez; Giovanni Ponti


ThE Papers | 2010

Strategic interaction and conventions

María Paz Espinosa; Jaromír Kovářík; Giovanni Ponti


Quantitative Economics | 2018

Learning in network games

Jaromír Kovářík; Friederike Mengel; José Gabriel Romero


Revista Internacional De Sociologia | 2012

Interacción estratégica y convenciones

María Paz Espinosa; Jaromír Kovářík; Giovanni Ponti

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María Paz Espinosa

University of the Basque Country

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Gergely Horvath

Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University

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