Social exclusion can trigger compensatory behaviors when social needs are threatened. Compensatory behaviors may include prosocial behaviors, such as charitable giving, as a way to reconnect socially with other people. Other forms of compensatory behaviors may involve the creation of social connections with money by imbuing it with human characteristics, a process known as anthropomorphism. But what happens if charitable giving cross paths with money anthropomorphism in the wake of social exclusion? The present study examines the roles of social exclusion and money anthropomorphism in charitable giving. In this study, we made four hypotheses. Firstly, we predicted that when money is not anthropomorphized, our participants would be m...
In philanthropic research, much attention has been given to the impact of the actual costs of giving...
Past work reveals that on one hand, loneliness heightens the motivation to seek out social connectio...
In this dissertation we add two new experimental studies to the growing catalog of non-economic fact...
What happens when people think of money as a human instead of as a mere object? The present research...
One line of research suggests that when people feel lonely, they may engage in anthropomorphic proce...
Humans are social beings with a strong desire to maintain relationships with others. Past studies ha...
People are often reluctant to comply with social causes because doing so may involve personal sacrif...
Humans are known for their extensive prosocial behavior. An example of such behavior is philanthropi...
A large part of the total charitable giving (approximately 70%) in the United States come from indiv...
Both giving and receiving money have emotional benefits, but when gifts of value are made in the con...
Social exclusion has been shown to produce a number of different responses. This research examines t...
Humans are remarkable for the level of altruistic and prosocial behaviour they display. This has bee...
Social consequences of charitable giving have been highlighted by researchers as key determinants of...
Anthropological analyses of charity are often based on Maussian theories of gift exchange and inequa...
Is it possible to influence people´s willingness to donate money? In two experiments we investigated...
In philanthropic research, much attention has been given to the impact of the actual costs of giving...
Past work reveals that on one hand, loneliness heightens the motivation to seek out social connectio...
In this dissertation we add two new experimental studies to the growing catalog of non-economic fact...
What happens when people think of money as a human instead of as a mere object? The present research...
One line of research suggests that when people feel lonely, they may engage in anthropomorphic proce...
Humans are social beings with a strong desire to maintain relationships with others. Past studies ha...
People are often reluctant to comply with social causes because doing so may involve personal sacrif...
Humans are known for their extensive prosocial behavior. An example of such behavior is philanthropi...
A large part of the total charitable giving (approximately 70%) in the United States come from indiv...
Both giving and receiving money have emotional benefits, but when gifts of value are made in the con...
Social exclusion has been shown to produce a number of different responses. This research examines t...
Humans are remarkable for the level of altruistic and prosocial behaviour they display. This has bee...
Social consequences of charitable giving have been highlighted by researchers as key determinants of...
Anthropological analyses of charity are often based on Maussian theories of gift exchange and inequa...
Is it possible to influence people´s willingness to donate money? In two experiments we investigated...
In philanthropic research, much attention has been given to the impact of the actual costs of giving...
Past work reveals that on one hand, loneliness heightens the motivation to seek out social connectio...
In this dissertation we add two new experimental studies to the growing catalog of non-economic fact...