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Dive into the research topics where Margarita Leib is active.

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Featured researches published by Margarita Leib.


Psychological Science | 2015

Justifications Shape Ethical Blind Spots

Andrea Pittarello; Margarita Leib; Tom Gordon-Hecker; Shaul Shalvi

To some extent, unethical behavior results from people’s limited attention to ethical considerations, which results in an ethical blind spot. Here, we focus on the role of ambiguity in shaping people’s ethical blind spots, which in turn lead to their ethical failures. We suggest that in ambiguous settings, individuals’ attention shifts toward tempting information, which determines the magnitude of their lies. Employing a novel ambiguous-dice paradigm, we asked participants to report the outcome of the die roll appearing closest to the location of a previously presented fixation cross on a computer screen; this outcome would determine their pay. We varied the value of the die second closest to the fixation cross to be either higher (i.e., tempting) or lower (i.e., not tempting) than the die closest to the fixation cross. Results of two experiments revealed that in ambiguous settings, people’s incorrect responses were self-serving. Tracking participants’ eye movements demonstrated that people’s ethical blind spots are shaped by increased attention toward tempting information.


Psychological Science | 2018

Ethical Free Riding: When Honest People Find Dishonest Partners:

Jörg Gross; Margarita Leib; Theo Offerman; Shaul Shalvi

Corruption is often the product of coordinated rule violations. Here, we investigated how such corrupt collaboration emerges and spreads when people can choose their partners versus when they cannot. Participants were assigned a partner and could increase their payoff by coordinated lying. After several interactions, they were either free to choose whether to stay with or switch their partner or forced to stay with or switch their partner. Results reveal that both dishonest and honest people exploit the freedom to choose a partner. Dishonest people seek a partner who will also lie—a “partner in crime.” Honest people, by contrast, engage in ethical free riding: They refrain from lying but also from leaving dishonest partners, taking advantage of their partners’ lies. We conclude that to curb collaborative corruption, relying on people’s honesty is insufficient. Encouraging honest individuals not to engage in ethical free riding is essential.


Economics Letters | 2017

The bad consequences of teamwork

Ivan Soraperra; Ori Weisel; Ro’i Zultan; Sys Kochavi; Margarita Leib; Hadar Shalev; Shaul Shalvi


Journal of Behavioral Decision Making | 2017

What Provides Justification for Cheating : Producing or Observing Counterfactuals?

Claudia Bassarak; Margarita Leib; Dorothee Mischkowski; Sabrina Strang; Andreas Glöckner; Shaul Shalvi


Psychology, Public Policy and Law | 2016

Rule Orientation and Behavior: Development and Validation of a Scale Measuring Individual Acceptance of Rule Violation

Adam Fine; Benjamin van Rooij; Yuval Feldman; Shaul Shalvi; Eline Scheper; Margarita Leib; Elizabeth Cauffman


Cheating, Corruption, and Concealment | 2016

Corrupt collaboration : A behavioral ethics approach

Shaul Shalvi; Ori Weisel; S. Kochavi-Gamliel; Margarita Leib; J.W. van Prooijen; P.A.M. van Lange


Archive | 2018

Ethical Free-Riding

Jörg Gross; Margarita Leib; Shaul Shalvi; Theo Offerman


UC Irvine School of Law Research Paper Series | 2015

Rule Conditionality in Comparison: Understanding Variation and Effects of Justifications for Violating the Law

Benjamin van Rooij; Adam Fine; Margarita Leib; Shaul Shalvi; Yuval Feldman; Yanyan Zhang; Yunmei Wu; Eline Scheper; Zhang Qian; Wanhong Zhang


Archive | 2015

Rule Conditionality, Morality, and Compliance

Adam Fine; Benjamin van Rooij; Yuval Feldman; Shaul Shalvi; Eline Scheper; Margarita Leib; Elizabeth Cauffman


UC Irvine School of Law Research Paper Series | 2014

Rule Conditionality, Deterrence and Compliance

Adam Fine; Benjamin van Rooij; Yuval Feldman; Shaul Shalvi; Eline Scheper; Margarita Leib; Elizabeth Cauffman

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Shaul Shalvi

University of Amsterdam

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Adam Fine

University of California

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Andrea Pittarello

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Hadar Shalev

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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