Trust is essential for social interactions, cooperation and social order. Research has shown that social status and common group memberships are important determinants of receiving and reciprocating trust. However, social status and group membership can coincide or diverge-with potentially different effects. Our study contributes to the existing literature on the role of status and group membership by testing two separate trust-generating mechanisms against each other. We examine if individuals tend to place trust in high-status groups (irrespective of their own group membership) or, rather, if they tend to trust others with whom they share a common group membership. We assume that status group membership is signalled by cultural (musical) ...
The role that shared group membership plays in decisions to trust others is now well established wit...
This study examines trust in technology-supported groups from the perspectives of culture, social pr...
This review examines the relationship between a person's social status and trust. Previous research ...
Trust is essential for social interactions, cooperation and social order. Research has shown that so...
This research examined the relationship between social class and generalized trust, or a belief that...
People often cooperate with members of their own group, and discriminate against members of other gr...
People often have generalised expectations of trustworthiness about ingroup and outgroup members, ba...
Group-based trust was investigated by considering the relationship between 2 groups withdiffering so...
We present the results of an experiment measuring the impact of low group status and relative group ...
In a laboratory experiment we test the interaction effects of status and group identity on interpers...
People are motivated to hold favorable attitudes about the systems on which they depend, so they jus...
Trust and trustworthiness are important components of social capital and much attention has been de...
International challenges such as climate change, poverty, and intergroup conflict require countries ...
Using a modified trust game paradigm, this study aimed to find US participants’ expectation of in-gr...
Trust in individuals is strongly guided by group membership; ingroup favouritism in trust is a very ...
The role that shared group membership plays in decisions to trust others is now well established wit...
This study examines trust in technology-supported groups from the perspectives of culture, social pr...
This review examines the relationship between a person's social status and trust. Previous research ...
Trust is essential for social interactions, cooperation and social order. Research has shown that so...
This research examined the relationship between social class and generalized trust, or a belief that...
People often cooperate with members of their own group, and discriminate against members of other gr...
People often have generalised expectations of trustworthiness about ingroup and outgroup members, ba...
Group-based trust was investigated by considering the relationship between 2 groups withdiffering so...
We present the results of an experiment measuring the impact of low group status and relative group ...
In a laboratory experiment we test the interaction effects of status and group identity on interpers...
People are motivated to hold favorable attitudes about the systems on which they depend, so they jus...
Trust and trustworthiness are important components of social capital and much attention has been de...
International challenges such as climate change, poverty, and intergroup conflict require countries ...
Using a modified trust game paradigm, this study aimed to find US participants’ expectation of in-gr...
Trust in individuals is strongly guided by group membership; ingroup favouritism in trust is a very ...
The role that shared group membership plays in decisions to trust others is now well established wit...
This study examines trust in technology-supported groups from the perspectives of culture, social pr...
This review examines the relationship between a person's social status and trust. Previous research ...