Although theory suggests individuals are more willing to incur a personal cost to benefit ingroup members, compared to outgroup members, there is inconsistent evidence in support of this perspective. Applying meta-analytic techniques, we harness a relatively recent explosion of research on intergroup discrimination in cooperative decision making to address several fundamental unresolved issues. First, summarizing evidence across studies, we find a small to medium effect size indicating that people are more cooperative with ingroup, compared to outgroup, members (d = 0.32). Second, we forward and test predictions about the conditions that moderate ingroup favoritism from 2 influential perspectives: a social identity approach and a bounded ge...
Research on groups in organizations has regularly identified the presence of favoritism toward membe...
Background: Indirect reciprocity is a mechanism for cooperation in social dilemma situations. In ind...
The discrepancy between ingroup favoritism and outgroup hostility is well established in social psyc...
Ingroup favoritism—the tendency to favor members of one’s own group over those in other groups—is we...
Ingroup favoritism—the tendency to favor members of one’s own group over those in other groups—is we...
AbstractIndirect reciprocity in which players cooperate with unacquainted other players having good ...
In two comprehensive and fully incentivized studies, we investigate the development of ingroup favor...
We investigated the effect of structural interdependencies between groups (especially inequality), a...
<div><p>We investigated the effect of structural interdependencies between groups (especially inequa...
Ingroup favoritism—the tendency to favor members of one’s own group over those in other groups—is we...
Ingroup favoritism has been widely verified in the context of intergroup competition; however, how c...
To what extent is the tendency to act more prosocially towards ingroup than outgroup members a 'defa...
In-group favouritism is ubiquitous and previous studies have consistently found that indi...
People tend to voluntarily sacrifice their own interests to reject unfair proposals, and this behavi...
This study examines the effects of ingroup favoritism and outgroup hostility ("parochialism"), as we...
Research on groups in organizations has regularly identified the presence of favoritism toward membe...
Background: Indirect reciprocity is a mechanism for cooperation in social dilemma situations. In ind...
The discrepancy between ingroup favoritism and outgroup hostility is well established in social psyc...
Ingroup favoritism—the tendency to favor members of one’s own group over those in other groups—is we...
Ingroup favoritism—the tendency to favor members of one’s own group over those in other groups—is we...
AbstractIndirect reciprocity in which players cooperate with unacquainted other players having good ...
In two comprehensive and fully incentivized studies, we investigate the development of ingroup favor...
We investigated the effect of structural interdependencies between groups (especially inequality), a...
<div><p>We investigated the effect of structural interdependencies between groups (especially inequa...
Ingroup favoritism—the tendency to favor members of one’s own group over those in other groups—is we...
Ingroup favoritism has been widely verified in the context of intergroup competition; however, how c...
To what extent is the tendency to act more prosocially towards ingroup than outgroup members a 'defa...
In-group favouritism is ubiquitous and previous studies have consistently found that indi...
People tend to voluntarily sacrifice their own interests to reject unfair proposals, and this behavi...
This study examines the effects of ingroup favoritism and outgroup hostility ("parochialism"), as we...
Research on groups in organizations has regularly identified the presence of favoritism toward membe...
Background: Indirect reciprocity is a mechanism for cooperation in social dilemma situations. In ind...
The discrepancy between ingroup favoritism and outgroup hostility is well established in social psyc...