תקציר
Two studies examined lying, fair sharing, and trust of Israeli police officers and laypeople to police and non-police target persons in the Ultimatum Game. Participants aimed to retain as many resources as possible in a sharing situation. To this end, they could conceal resources from the target person. Thus, a measure of lying was created by letting participants act in a specific role. Results indicated that police officers lied less to police targets than non-police targets. Conversely, laypeople lied more to police targets and less to non-police targets. Police officers' preference for honest sharing with police targets and laypeople’s selfish sharing with police targets signified the first study’s results. Results were explained by ingroup-outgroup differences, further inspired by severe events undermining the Israeli police’s reputation. One year later, similar but weaker results were obtained in a second study. Police officers trusted police targets more than non-police targets, and laypeople trusted police targets less than non-police targets.
| שפה מקורית | אנגלית |
|---|---|
| עמודים (מ-עד) | 2530-2549 |
| מספר עמודים | 20 |
| כתב עת | Psychological Reports |
| כרך | 128 |
| מספר גיליון | 4 |
| מזהי עצם דיגיטלי (DOIs) | |
| סטטוס פרסום | פורסם - אוג׳ 2025 |
טביעת אצבע
להלן מוצגים תחומי המחקר של הפרסום 'Lying to Police Officers in the Ultimatum Game: An Experimental Study With Israeli Samples'. יחד הם יוצרים טביעת אצבע ייחודית.פורמט ציטוט ביבליוגרפי
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