Turkers of the World Unite: Multilevel In-Group Bias Among Crowdworkers on Amazon Mechanical Turk
Author(s)
Almaatouq, Abdullah; Krafft, Peter; Dunham, Yarrow; Rand, David G; Pentland, Alex
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© The Author(s) 2019. Crowdsourcing has become an indispensable tool in the behavioral sciences. Often, the “crowd” is considered a black box for gathering impersonal but generalizable data. Researchers sometimes seem to forget that crowdworkers are people with social contexts, unique personalities, and lives. To test this possibility, we measure how crowdworkers (N = 2,337, preregistered) share a monetary endowment in a Dictator Game with another Mechanical Turk (MTurk) worker, a worker from another crowdworking platform, or a randomly selected stranger. Results indicate preferential in-group treatment for MTurk workers in particular and for crowdworkers in general. Cooperation levels from typical anonymous economic games on MTurk are not a good proxy for anonymous interactions and may generalize most readily only to the intragroup context.
Date issued
2020Department
Sloan School of Management; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Media Laboratory; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Institute for Data, Systems, and SocietyJournal
Social Psychological and Personality Science
Publisher
SAGE Publications