Beyond the group mind: a quantitative review of the interindividual-intergroup discontinuity effect
Beyond the group mind: a quantitative review of the interindividual-intergroup discontinuity effect
This quantitative review of 130 comparisons of interindividual and intergroup interactions in the context of mixed-motive situations reveals that intergroup interactions are generally more competitive than interindividual interactions. The authors identify 4 moderators of this interindividual-intergroup discontinuity effect, each based on the theoretical perspective that the discontinuity effect flows from greater fear and greed in intergroup relative to interindividual interactions. Results reveal that each moderator shares a unique association with the magnitude of the discontinuity effect. The discontinuity effect is larger when (a) participants interact with an opponent whose behavior is unconstrained by the experimenter or constrained by the experimenter to be cooperative rather than constrained by the experimenter to be reciprocal, (b) group members make a group decision rather than individual decisions, (c) unconstrained communication between participants is present rather than absent, and (d) conflict of interest is severe rather than mild.
698-722
Wildschut, Tim
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Pinter, Brad
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Vevea, Jack L.
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Insko, Chester A.
b947725e-ccb9-4daa-84ca-c71f456cea3b
Schopler, John
88fe83f7-5c26-4b48-8738-90fabc85b48c
2003
Wildschut, Tim
4452a61d-1649-4c4a-bb1d-154ec446ff81
Pinter, Brad
4404cd89-0aa3-4bf5-b745-d4aaae7eab8c
Vevea, Jack L.
50f2241d-5f68-425b-a232-bcefb0a05fab
Insko, Chester A.
b947725e-ccb9-4daa-84ca-c71f456cea3b
Schopler, John
88fe83f7-5c26-4b48-8738-90fabc85b48c
Wildschut, Tim, Pinter, Brad, Vevea, Jack L., Insko, Chester A. and Schopler, John
(2003)
Beyond the group mind: a quantitative review of the interindividual-intergroup discontinuity effect.
Psychological Bulletin, 129 (5), .
(doi:10.1037/0033-2909.129.5.698).
Abstract
This quantitative review of 130 comparisons of interindividual and intergroup interactions in the context of mixed-motive situations reveals that intergroup interactions are generally more competitive than interindividual interactions. The authors identify 4 moderators of this interindividual-intergroup discontinuity effect, each based on the theoretical perspective that the discontinuity effect flows from greater fear and greed in intergroup relative to interindividual interactions. Results reveal that each moderator shares a unique association with the magnitude of the discontinuity effect. The discontinuity effect is larger when (a) participants interact with an opponent whose behavior is unconstrained by the experimenter or constrained by the experimenter to be cooperative rather than constrained by the experimenter to be reciprocal, (b) group members make a group decision rather than individual decisions, (c) unconstrained communication between participants is present rather than absent, and (d) conflict of interest is severe rather than mild.
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Published date: 2003
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Local EPrints ID: 18631
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/18631
ISSN: 0033-2909
PURE UUID: b28d57a7-ef87-422e-8f55-3fcb483978a2
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Date deposited: 29 Nov 2005
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:21
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Contributors
Author:
Brad Pinter
Author:
Jack L. Vevea
Author:
Chester A. Insko
Author:
John Schopler
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