Journal article | Zeitschriftenartikel

Is there a pro-self component behind the prominence effect? Individual resource allocation decisions with communities as potential beneficiaries

An important problem for decision-makers in society deals with the efficient and equitable allocation of scarce resources to individuals and groups. The significance of this problem is rapidly growing since there is a rising demand for scarce resources all over the world. Such resource dilemmas belong to a conceptually broader class of situations known as social dilemmas. In this type of dilemma, individual choices that appear ''rational'' often result in suboptimal group outcomes. In this article we study how people make monetary allocation decisions between the community where they live and a neighbouring community, with the aim of finding out to what extent these decisions are subject to biased over-weighting. The manuscript reports four experiments that deal with the way individuals make such allocation decisions when the potential beneficiaries are such communities. The specific goal of these experiments is to gauge the amount of bias in the weights that people assign to the various beneficiaries. Taken together, the results from all the four experiments suggest that making the gain of the neighbouring community prominent to a higher extent de-biases the outcomes (the prominence effect) compared to when own community gain is made prominent. Place identity is discussed as a potentially important factor in this connection. Hence, it may be argued that there seems to be some kind of a pro-self component that is able to explain a large part of the variance observed for the prominence effect. Connections between such a factor and in-group favouritism are discussed. A strength of the study was that these major results appeared to be quite robust when considered as task effects, as the salience of the manipulated context factors in the studies (in terms of reliable main or interaction effects) did not distort them.

Is there a pro-self component behind the prominence effect? Individual resource allocation decisions with communities as potential beneficiaries

Urheber*in: Selart, Marcus; Eek, Daniel

Attribution - ShareAlike 4.0 International

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ISSN
0020-7594
Extent
Seite(n): 429-440
Language
Englisch
Notes
Status: Veröffentlichungsversion; begutachtet (peer reviewed)

Bibliographic citation
International Journal of Psychology, 40(6)

Subject
Psychologie
Sozialpsychologie
Entscheidungsfindung
soziales Dilemma
Allokation
Geld
Ressourcen
Knappheit
Gemeinschaft
Individuum
Identität
soziale Beziehungen
Gruppe
Alternative
Gleichheit
Interaktion

Event
Geistige Schöpfung
(who)
Selart, Marcus
Eek, Daniel
Event
Veröffentlichung
(where)
Vereinigtes Königreich
(when)
2005

URN
urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-400022
Rights
GESIS - Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften. Bibliothek Köln
Last update
21.06.2024, 4:27 PM CEST

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Object type

  • Zeitschriftenartikel

Associated

  • Selart, Marcus
  • Eek, Daniel

Time of origin

  • 2005

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