Gneezy, Ayelet, 177, 257–58
golf, 55–65
cheating by “average golfer” vs. study participants and, 63–64
mistallying score in, 61–64
moving location of ball in, 58–59, 63
mulligans in, 60–61, 63–64
self-monitoring in, 56–57
survey on cheating in, 57–64
government regulations, 234
grandmothers, sudden deaths of, at exam time, 106–8
gray matter, 169–70
Green, Jennifer Wideman, 117
grocery shopping, ego depletion and, 109, 112–13
group or team work, 220–23
performance unaffected by, 233
possible benefits of, 223
predominance of, in professional lives, 217–18, 235
social utility and, 222–23
Gruneisen, Aline, 210–11, 257
guilt, self-inflicted pain and, 250–52
Harford, Tim, 3–4
Harvard Medical School, 82
Harvey, Ann, 75
Henn, Steve, 209
heretics, external signaling of, 120
Hinduism, 25
honesty threshold, 130–31
honor codes, 41–45, 204
ideological organizations, 232
“I knew it all along” feeling, 149
illegal businesses, loyalty and care for customers in, 138–39
impulsive (or emotional) vs. rational (or deliberative) parts of ourselves, 97–106
cognitive load and, 99–100
ego depletion and, 100–106
exhaustion and, 97–98
Inbar, Yoel, 250, 264
infectious nature of cheating, 191–216, 249
bacterial infections compared to, 192–93
in class, 195–97
collaborative cheating in relation to, 221–22
Congress members’ misuse of PAC money and, 208–10
corporate dishonesty and, 192, 207–8
cost-benefit analysis and, 201–3, 205
essay mills and, 210–13
matrix task and, 197–204
positive side of moral contagion and, 215–16
regaining ethical health and, 214–15