The experience of trust in everyday life
The experience of trust in everyday life
In this contribution, we review current research on daily-life experiences of trust in diverse and naturally occurring social interactions ranging from close relationships to complete strangers. Experience-sampling methodology allows the joint examination of situational, relational, dispositional, motivational, and behavioral variables in their relation to trust. Thereby, these recent studies advance our understanding of how trust is shaped by important features of the social situation such as perceived conflict of interest. They elucidate how trust fluctuates in accordance with stable traits, and how these traits interact with situational variables (e.g., social closeness to the target). Furthermore, trust connects social perceptions of trustees with trustors’ prosocial tendencies.
245-251
Weiss, Alexa
38d1177a-1f9e-44b3-b404-47eebb701257
Burgmer, Pascal
c8c43b56-572c-4242-800c-9f44ff648cec
Hofmann, Wilhelm
1b13d70d-5c8b-4b84-b063-5bdfd871eb34
5 November 2021
Weiss, Alexa
38d1177a-1f9e-44b3-b404-47eebb701257
Burgmer, Pascal
c8c43b56-572c-4242-800c-9f44ff648cec
Hofmann, Wilhelm
1b13d70d-5c8b-4b84-b063-5bdfd871eb34
Weiss, Alexa, Burgmer, Pascal and Hofmann, Wilhelm
(2021)
The experience of trust in everyday life.
Current Opinion in Psychology, 44, .
(doi:10.1016/j.copsyc.2021.09.016).
Abstract
In this contribution, we review current research on daily-life experiences of trust in diverse and naturally occurring social interactions ranging from close relationships to complete strangers. Experience-sampling methodology allows the joint examination of situational, relational, dispositional, motivational, and behavioral variables in their relation to trust. Thereby, these recent studies advance our understanding of how trust is shaped by important features of the social situation such as perceived conflict of interest. They elucidate how trust fluctuates in accordance with stable traits, and how these traits interact with situational variables (e.g., social closeness to the target). Furthermore, trust connects social perceptions of trustees with trustors’ prosocial tendencies.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 25 September 2021
Published date: 5 November 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 478251
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478251
ISSN: 2352-250X
PURE UUID: 4ee1dae4-e6e4-45a2-81e7-1cb876c13fad
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Date deposited: 26 Jun 2023 16:54
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:15
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Contributors
Author:
Alexa Weiss
Author:
Pascal Burgmer
Author:
Wilhelm Hofmann
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