Applying the value of equality unequally: Effects of value instantiations that vary in typicality
Applying the value of equality unequally: Effects of value instantiations that vary in typicality
Across 4 experiments, the authors investigated the role of value instantiation in bridging the gap between abstract social values and behavior in specific situations. They predicted and found that participants engaged in more egalitarian behavior (point allocation using the minimal group paradigm) after contemplating a typical instantiation of the value of equality compared to an atypical instantiation or a control condition that simply made the value salient. This effect occurred when participants generated reasons for valuing equality in the instantiation (Experiment 1) and when participants merely read about hypothetical examples of the instantiation context (Experiments 2, 3, and 4). Results across experiments indicated that the effect of prior instantiations was not mediated by changes in the abstract value; instead, the process of applying the abstract value was crucial (Experiment 4). Together, the experiments show that the process of applying an abstract value to a specific situation can be influenced by seemingly unrelated prior episodes.
598-614
Maio, Gregory R.
66e10dd8-9918-4544-b71c-cb6eb37166fa
Hahn, Ulrike
1fac8d6c-5328-46c1-98fc-90e54eb74978
Frost, John M.
6d644639-ad3f-4e80-8db9-d0f90fccb5a9
Cheung, Wing-Yee
7a3c3949-2468-466a-946b-f629f1ce07f4
October 2009
Maio, Gregory R.
66e10dd8-9918-4544-b71c-cb6eb37166fa
Hahn, Ulrike
1fac8d6c-5328-46c1-98fc-90e54eb74978
Frost, John M.
6d644639-ad3f-4e80-8db9-d0f90fccb5a9
Cheung, Wing-Yee
7a3c3949-2468-466a-946b-f629f1ce07f4
Maio, Gregory R., Hahn, Ulrike, Frost, John M. and Cheung, Wing-Yee
(2009)
Applying the value of equality unequally: Effects of value instantiations that vary in typicality.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 4 (97), .
(doi:10.1037/a0016683).
(PMID:19785481)
Abstract
Across 4 experiments, the authors investigated the role of value instantiation in bridging the gap between abstract social values and behavior in specific situations. They predicted and found that participants engaged in more egalitarian behavior (point allocation using the minimal group paradigm) after contemplating a typical instantiation of the value of equality compared to an atypical instantiation or a control condition that simply made the value salient. This effect occurred when participants generated reasons for valuing equality in the instantiation (Experiment 1) and when participants merely read about hypothetical examples of the instantiation context (Experiments 2, 3, and 4). Results across experiments indicated that the effect of prior instantiations was not mediated by changes in the abstract value; instead, the process of applying the abstract value was crucial (Experiment 4). Together, the experiments show that the process of applying an abstract value to a specific situation can be influenced by seemingly unrelated prior episodes.
Text
Maio,_Hahn,_Frost,_&_Cheung_JPSP_2009.pdf
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Published date: October 2009
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 169459
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/169459
ISSN: 0022-3514
PURE UUID: ccaf9513-6ccf-463c-8f86-aa1195c7fd21
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 06 May 2011 14:23
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:20
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Gregory R. Maio
Author:
Ulrike Hahn
Author:
John M. Frost
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics