Is the Use of Averaging in Advice Taking Modulated by Culture?

被引:12
|
作者
Mercier, Hugo [1 ]
Yama, Hiroshi [2 ]
Kawasaki, Yayoi [3 ]
Adachi, Kuniko [4 ]
Van der Henst, Jean-Baptiste [5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Philadelphia, Philosophy Polit & Econ Program, 249 South 36th St,313 Cohen Hall, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[2] Osaka City Univ, Grad Undergrad Sch Literature & Human Sci, Osaka 5588585, Japan
[3] Nihon Univ, Coll Humanities & Social Sci, Inst Humanities & Social Sci, Setagaya Ku, Tokyo 1568550, Japan
[4] Osaka City Univ, Urban Culture Res Ctr, Grad Sch Literature & Human Sci, Osaka 5588585, Japan
[5] Univ Lyon, Inst Sci Cognit, Lab Langage Cerveau Cognit L2C2, 67 Blvd Pinel, F-69675 Bron, France
关键词
Advice taking; averaging; choosing; cross-cultural;
D O I
10.1163/156853712X633893
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Many recent experiments have explored the way people take advice into account. It has been observed that in so doing participants often rely on one of the two following strategies: averaging between the different opinions or choosing one of the opinions, as opposed to using more complex weighting strategies. While several factors that affect strategy choice have been investigated, no attention has been paid to potential cultural variations. Among the many relevant cross-cultural differences, results have show that Easterners tend to favor compromise more than Westerners, a difference that could translate into a greater preference for averaging in Eastern population. In Experiment 1, we confronted Japanese and French participants to two pieces of advice and asked them to form an aggregate answer. In Experiment 2, participants had to aggregate their own opinion and a piece of advice. In neither of the experiments were the Japanese more likely to use averaging than the French. Explanations for this robust absence of difference are suggested. The only difference that emerged was that the Japanese were more likely to choose the advice and less likely to choose their own answer than the French. Different interpretations of this result are discussed, including the possibility that it is an artefact of a theoretically irrelevant difference between the populations under study.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 16
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] The impact of advice distance on advice taking: Evidence from an ERP study
    Du, Xiufang
    Ren, Yubing
    Wu, Shun
    Wu, Yuxi
    NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2019, 129 : 56 - 64
  • [22] Pushing away from representative advice: Advice taking, anchoring, and adjustment
    Rader, Christina A.
    Soil, Jack B.
    Larrick, Richard P.
    ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR AND HUMAN DECISION PROCESSES, 2015, 130 : 26 - 43
  • [23] Averaging sets of expressive faces is modulated by eccentricity
    To, Michelle P. S.
    Carvey, Katherine M.
    Carvey, Richard J.
    Liu, Chang Hong
    JOURNAL OF VISION, 2019, 19 (11): : 1 - 14
  • [24] Advisors want their advice to be used - but not too much: An interpersonal perspective on advice taking
    Ache, Fabian
    Rader, Christina
    Huetter, Mandy
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2020, 89
  • [25] The impact of the synergy of the cost and quality of advice on the advice taking in the career decision process
    Ye, Yujian
    Dai, Fengping
    He, Quan
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2016, 51 : 354 - 355
  • [26] LIMEADE: From AI Explanations to Advice Taking
    Lee, Benjamin Charles Germain
    Downey, Doug
    Lo, Kyle
    Weld, Daniel S.
    ACM TRANSACTIONS ON INTERACTIVE INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS, 2023, 13 (04)
  • [27] ADVICE-TAKING CHESS COMPUTER - REPLY
    ROSEN, S
    SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, 1973, 229 (04) : 8 - 8
  • [28] Creating advice-taking reinforcement learners
    Maclin, R
    Shavlik, JW
    MACHINE LEARNING, 1996, 22 (1-3) : 251 - 281
  • [29] Psychological advice during Taking back a process
    Marbe, Karl
    ARCHIV FUR DIE GESAMTE PSYCHOLOGIE, 1931, 82 (1-2): : 241 - 252
  • [30] Hackney Advice Forum: taking back the power
    Benson, Andy
    VOLUNTARY SECTOR REVIEW, 2010, 1 (02): : 233 - 238