Lisa Cameron from the Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute conducted a study exploring the behavioral impact of China's One-Child Policy. The dataset includes experimental and survey data examining effects on altruism, trust, trustworthiness, risk-taking, and competitiveness. It also contains survey data on personality traits and demographics of the sample.
Use Cases
- Analyzing the relationship between the One-Child Policy and individual altruism based on experimental data mentioned in the description
- Modeling the effect of the policy on risk-taking and competitiveness based on described behavioral measures
- Studying correlations between demographic factors and personality traits based on the included survey data
Strengths
- Data is derived from a formal experimental study, suggesting a structured collection method.
- Includes multiple behavioral dimensions: altruism, trust, trustworthiness, risk-taking, and competitiveness.
Limitations
- Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment.
- Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download.
- Last update date is unknown; freshness unverified.
Provenance
- Source
- Lisa Cameron, Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute
- Collection Method
- Experimental and survey data collection.
- Geography
- China