If you look at tables 8 and 9 from Gordon you can see that once you control for “transparency” (i.e. how obvious the bullshit is) the setting is no longer a significant predictor. So I’m not sure I agree that it’s the “iterated” part of real-world interactions which cause this result (it seems likely that you can more easily tell if someone’s changing their behavior to follow an experiment if they are a close coworker than a random student, for example), but I think your point about transparency being important is relevant.
This is a good point.
If you look at tables 8 and 9 from Gordon you can see that once you control for “transparency” (i.e. how obvious the bullshit is) the setting is no longer a significant predictor. So I’m not sure I agree that it’s the “iterated” part of real-world interactions which cause this result (it seems likely that you can more easily tell if someone’s changing their behavior to follow an experiment if they are a close coworker than a random student, for example), but I think your point about transparency being important is relevant.