Category-Based Learning About Deviant Outgroup Members Hinders Performance in Trust Decision Making
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Telga, Maïka; Lemus Martín, Soledad De; Cañadas, Elena; Rodríguez Bailón, Rosa María; Lupiáñez Castillo, JuanEditorial
Frontiers Media
Materia
Categorization Individuation Motivation Trust Outgroup homogeneity
Fecha
2018Referencia bibliográfica
Telga M, de Lemus S, Cañadas E, Rodríguez-Bailón R and Lupiáñez J (2018) Category-Based Learning About Deviant Outgroup Members Hinders Performance in Trust Decision Making. Front. Psychol. 9:1008. [http://hdl.handle.net/10481/56743]
Patrocinador
This work was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports, with pre-doctoral FPU fellowship FPU14/07106 to MT, and the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness, with research projects PSI2014-52764-P and PSI2017-84926-P to JL, PSI2016-78839 to RR-B and PSI2016-79971-P to SdL.Resumen
The present research examines whether individuation and categorization processes
influence trust decisions about strangers at first and across repeated interactions.
In a partial replication of the study reported by Cañadas et al. (2015), participants
played an adaptation of the multi-round trust game paradigm and had to decide
whether or not to cooperate with unknown partners. Gender (Study 1a) and ethnicity
(Studies 1b, 2, and 3) served to create distinct social categories among the game
partners, whose reciprocation rates were manipulated at group and individual levels.
At the group level, two social groups (i.e., ingroup vs. outgroup) were associated with
opposite reciprocation rates (i.e., high vs. low reciprocation rate). At the individual
level, consistency was manipulated by altering the reciprocation rate of one out of
four members of each social group. That is, there was one inconsistent individual in
each group showing a pattern of reciprocation opposite to the group reciprocation rate.
Our data, contrary to Cañadas et al.’s (2015) findings, suggested that ingroup partners
were individuated given that participants made their decisions to cooperate with the
trustees according to their individual reciprocation rate and independently of the group
reciprocation rate. In contrast, decisions about outgroup partners (i.e., men in Study
1a and Blacks in Studies 1b, 2, and 3) were affected by category-based thinking. At
the same time, in comparison with ingroup, greater cooperation was observed with
ethnic outgroups but not with gender outgroups. The consistency of our results with the
previous literature on social categorization and across the three experiments seems to
indicate they are reliable, supporting the hypothesis that categorization and individuation
processes guide trust decision-making, promoting individuation mainly for ingroup and
categorization among outgroup members.