Conflict Resolution, Management, & Negotiation Graduate Program, Bar Ilan University.
Department of Psychology, University of Limerick.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2023 Jul;125(1):57-81. doi: 10.1037/pspa0000334. Epub 2023 Jan 12.
The question of whether individuals are more prone to trust or to mistrust has increasingly interested economists and psychologists in recent years. To investigate whether people have an initial response tendency to trust versus mistrust, we developed a novel paradigm-the Dominant Behavior Measure (DBM). Capitalizing on decades of meticulous research in basic cognitive psychology (i.e., bilingual studies, Stroop paradigm), we designed a task to measure the dominance of reactions in the social realm. Participants engaged in a series of trust games that involved switching between trusting and mistrusting two trustworthy counterparts and two untrustworthy counterparts, identified by color (while ignoring a distractor name) or by name (when no color was presented). Like other dominant response tendencies (e.g., participant's first language), trust is faster, harder to switch to, and more interfering/facilitating than mistrust (Experiments 1-7). The dominance of trust holds in various social contexts-certainty of counterpart's un/trustworthiness (Experiments 4a-4c), unfamiliar counterparts (Experiments 5 and 6), counterparts from one's in-group versus out-group (Experiment 6), and negative framing of trust (Experiment 7)-showing that the dominant tendency to trust people (but not nonsocial objects, Experiment 8) is context-independent and robust. We rule out alternative explanations such as asymmetric payoff (Experiments 2 and 4b), familiarity and strength of association (Experiments 5 and 6), demand characteristics (Experiment 7), and positivity bias (Experiment 8). Introducing the DBM as a novel paradigm, we show that trust dominates mistrust and discuss the potential of this paradigm to determine dominant responses in manifold social domains. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
近年来,个体是否更倾向于信任或怀疑这一问题引起了经济学家和心理学家的浓厚兴趣。为了探究人们是否有一种初始的信任或怀疑反应倾向,我们开发了一种新的范式——主导行为测量(DBM)。利用基础认知心理学(例如双语研究、Stroop 范式)数十年的细致研究,我们设计了一项任务来衡量社会领域反应的主导性。参与者参与了一系列信任游戏,涉及在两个值得信赖的对手和两个不值得信赖的对手之间进行信任或不信任的转换,这些对手通过颜色(同时忽略分心的名字)或名字(当没有颜色呈现时)来识别。与其他主导反应倾向(例如,参与者的第一语言)一样,信任比怀疑更快、更难转换,并且更具干扰性/促进性(实验 1-7)。信任的主导地位在各种社会情境中都存在——对手可信赖性的确定性(实验 4a-4c)、不熟悉的对手(实验 5 和 6)、来自内群体与外群体的对手(实验 6)以及信任的负面框架(实验 7)——表明,人们(而不是非社会对象,实验 8)更倾向于信任他人的主导倾向是独立于情境且稳健的。我们排除了其他解释,如不对称收益(实验 2 和 4b)、熟悉度和关联强度(实验 5 和 6)、需求特征(实验 7)和积极性偏见(实验 8)。我们将 DBM 作为一种新的范式引入,表明信任主导怀疑,并讨论了该范式在广泛的社会领域确定主导反应的潜力。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2023 APA,保留所有权利)。