Trust in individuals is strongly guided by group membership; ingroup favouritism in trust is a very robust finding in the literature on pro-social behaviour. We know, however, that group attitudes can change based on discrete encounters with group members (i.e., intergroup contact). This research examines how people use previous experiences with ingroup and outgroup members to inform decisions to trust novel, unknown group members. This process, which we refer to as member-to-member generalisation, was examined in two studies using a student sample (N = 135) and a larger and more representative online sample (N = 226). The moderating effects of group membership (ingroup vs outgroup vs unknown) and interaction valence (positive vs negative) ...
To what extent is the tendency to act more prosocially towards ingroup than outgroup members a 'defa...
Research on groups in organizations has regularly identified the presence of favoritism toward membe...
Betrayal aversion is an important factor in the decision to trust. Trust in members of one’s own soc...
People often have generalised expectations of trustworthiness about ingroup and outgroup members, ba...
The present research examines whether individuation and categorization processes influence trust dec...
The present research examines whether individuation and categorization processes influence trust dec...
Trust is essential for social interactions, cooperation and social order. Research has shown that so...
The role that shared group membership plays in decisions to trust others is now well established wit...
Trusting behaviour involves relinquishing control over outcomes valuable to the self. Previous resea...
We reasoned that observing high levels of cooperation among outgroup members might be threatening, c...
In every social transaction there is an element of trust. The degree to which we trust others, calle...
This study investigates whether participants use categorical or individual knowledge about others in...
To what extent do people help ingroup members based on a social preference to improve ingroup member...
Using a modified trust game paradigm, this study aimed to find US participants’ expectation of in-gr...
The generalization of attitudes toward individual outgroup members into attitudes toward the outgrou...
To what extent is the tendency to act more prosocially towards ingroup than outgroup members a 'defa...
Research on groups in organizations has regularly identified the presence of favoritism toward membe...
Betrayal aversion is an important factor in the decision to trust. Trust in members of one’s own soc...
People often have generalised expectations of trustworthiness about ingroup and outgroup members, ba...
The present research examines whether individuation and categorization processes influence trust dec...
The present research examines whether individuation and categorization processes influence trust dec...
Trust is essential for social interactions, cooperation and social order. Research has shown that so...
The role that shared group membership plays in decisions to trust others is now well established wit...
Trusting behaviour involves relinquishing control over outcomes valuable to the self. Previous resea...
We reasoned that observing high levels of cooperation among outgroup members might be threatening, c...
In every social transaction there is an element of trust. The degree to which we trust others, calle...
This study investigates whether participants use categorical or individual knowledge about others in...
To what extent do people help ingroup members based on a social preference to improve ingroup member...
Using a modified trust game paradigm, this study aimed to find US participants’ expectation of in-gr...
The generalization of attitudes toward individual outgroup members into attitudes toward the outgrou...
To what extent is the tendency to act more prosocially towards ingroup than outgroup members a 'defa...
Research on groups in organizations has regularly identified the presence of favoritism toward membe...
Betrayal aversion is an important factor in the decision to trust. Trust in members of one’s own soc...