Talk:Motivation crowding theory

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External links modified (February 2018)
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unsourced content per 23 June 2019
Removing this from article to meet DYK standards after DYK got pulled.


 * Thus, according to most theories before the 1970s, offering extrinsic incentives would only promote more of the rewarded behavior.


 * Rewards can serve as a signal in two ways (described below), they argue: signals to actors and signals to observers.
 * Rewards are conditional on task engagement.
 * Rewards can be interpreted by the agent or observers as controlling.-- Farang Rak Tham   (Talk) 08:14, 23 June 2019 (UTC)

Dubious consensus statement
In "Debate and meta-analyses" section the statement: "Through the debate, consensus seems to have emerged that crowding out reliably occurs if the following conditions are met:" does not seem to be supported by anything in the reference [33] (Gneezy, Uri; Meier, Stephan; Rey-Biel, Pedro (2011).) and the references for each condition do not really suggest an emerging consensus.

I think the options are either:
 * the statement be corrected to align with the existing references (e.g. "although a general consensus has not been achieved, some patterns are common in meta-analysis:")
 * add references that align better with the existing statement
 * remove the statement

I don't have confidence in my knowledge in the area to know which option is best, but I thought I should flag it because it seemed very misleading. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Jamespitt (talk • contribs) 07:08, 20 June 2022 (UTC)