Thursday, 26 April 2018

Can money heal all wounds? Social exchange norm modulates the preference for monetary versus social compensation. full article pdf download

Title of article - Can money heal all wounds? Social exchange norm modulates the preference for monetary versus social compensation.

Abstract

Compensation is a kind of pro-social behavior that can restore a social relationship jeopardized by interpersonal transgression. The effectiveness of a certain compensation strategy (e.g., repaying money, sharing loss, etc.) may vary as a function of the social norm/relationship. Previous studies have shown that two types of norms (or relationships), monetary/exchange and social/communal, differentially characterize people's appraisal of and response to social exchanges. In this study, we investigated how individual differences in preference for these norms affect individuals' perception of others' as well as the selection of their own reciprocal behaviors. In a two-phase experiment with interpersonal transgression, we asked the participant to perform a dot-estimation task with two partners who occasionally and unintentionally inflicted noise stimulation upon the participant (first phase). As compensation one partner gave money to the participant 80% of the time (the monetary partner) and the other bore the noise for the participant 80% of the time (the social partner). Results showed that the individuals' preference for compensation (repaying money versus bearing noise) affected their relationship (exchange versus communal) with the partners adopting different compensation strategies: participants tended to form communal relationships and felt closer to the partner whose compensation strategy matched their own preference. The participants could be differentiated into a social group, who tended to form communal relationship with the social partner, and a monetary group, who tended to form communal relationship with the monetary partner. In the second phase of the experiment, when the participants became transgressors and were asked to compensate for their transgression with money, the social group offered more compensation to the social partners than to the monetary partners, while the monetary group compensated less than the social group in general and showed no difference in their offers to the monetary and social partners. These findings demonstrate that the effectiveness of compensation varies as a function of individuals' preference for communal versus monetary norm and that monetary compensation alone does not heal all wounds.

CLICK HERE for Full article


Click button above to go to original article link with complete article details for Can money heal all wounds? Social exchange norm modulates the preference for monetary versus social compensation.

Please CLICK HERE to discuss with us on facebook about this article.

Click below for Details of research Institute


Details of Journal for Can money heal all wounds? Social exchange norm modulates the preference for monetary versus social compensation.

Journal Title - Frontiers in psychology

ISSN - 1664-1078

Volume - 6

Issue - 0

Publish date - 2015-

Language - eng

Country - Switzerland

No comments:

Post a Comment