The Perception of Family, City, and Country Values Is Often Biased

People often make inferences about the values of other people in their families, cities, and countries, but there are reasons to expect systematic biases in these inferences. Across four studies (N = 1,763), we examined people’s perceptions of the values of their families, fellow citizens of the cit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cross-cultural psychology 2018-06, Vol.49 (5), p.831-850
Hauptverfasser: Hanel, Paul H. P., Wolfradt, Uwe, Lins de Holanda Coelho, Gabriel, Wolf, Lukas J., Vilar, Roosevelt, Monteiro, Renan Pereira, Gouveia, Valdiney V., Crompton, Tom, Maio, Gregory R.
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container_end_page 850
container_issue 5
container_start_page 831
container_title Journal of cross-cultural psychology
container_volume 49
creator Hanel, Paul H. P.
Wolfradt, Uwe
Lins de Holanda Coelho, Gabriel
Wolf, Lukas J.
Vilar, Roosevelt
Monteiro, Renan Pereira
Gouveia, Valdiney V.
Crompton, Tom
Maio, Gregory R.
description People often make inferences about the values of other people in their families, cities, and countries, but there are reasons to expect systematic biases in these inferences. Across four studies (N = 1,763), we examined people’s perceptions of the values of their families, fellow citizens of the cities in which they live, and compatriots across three nations (Brazil, Germany, the United Kingdom). Our results show that people systematically misperceive comparison groups’ values. People underestimate the importance that their compatriots ascribe to more important values and overestimate the importance of less important values. This occurs in comparison with their own values, the actual values of the people living in the same city and the actual values of their compatriots. The effect sizes were medium to large. Furthermore, the results occurred independently of participants’ culture, time spent in the culture, and the underlying value model used. These results consistently show that people’s speculations about values in their community and society are biased in a self- and family favoring direction. In addition, we found that the structure of values (e.g., as proposed by Schwartz) holds for perceived family, fellow citizens of the cities in which they live, and compatriots’ values. Overall, our findings suggest that the values of other people are more selfless than is often believed.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0022022118767574
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P. ; Wolfradt, Uwe ; Lins de Holanda Coelho, Gabriel ; Wolf, Lukas J. ; Vilar, Roosevelt ; Monteiro, Renan Pereira ; Gouveia, Valdiney V. ; Crompton, Tom ; Maio, Gregory R.</creator><creatorcontrib>Hanel, Paul H. P. ; Wolfradt, Uwe ; Lins de Holanda Coelho, Gabriel ; Wolf, Lukas J. ; Vilar, Roosevelt ; Monteiro, Renan Pereira ; Gouveia, Valdiney V. ; Crompton, Tom ; Maio, Gregory R.</creatorcontrib><description>People often make inferences about the values of other people in their families, cities, and countries, but there are reasons to expect systematic biases in these inferences. Across four studies (N = 1,763), we examined people’s perceptions of the values of their families, fellow citizens of the cities in which they live, and compatriots across three nations (Brazil, Germany, the United Kingdom). Our results show that people systematically misperceive comparison groups’ values. People underestimate the importance that their compatriots ascribe to more important values and overestimate the importance of less important values. This occurs in comparison with their own values, the actual values of the people living in the same city and the actual values of their compatriots. The effect sizes were medium to large. Furthermore, the results occurred independently of participants’ culture, time spent in the culture, and the underlying value model used. These results consistently show that people’s speculations about values in their community and society are biased in a self- and family favoring direction. In addition, we found that the structure of values (e.g., as proposed by Schwartz) holds for perceived family, fellow citizens of the cities in which they live, and compatriots’ values. 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subjects Ascription
Bias
Cities
Citizens
Cross-cultural psychology
Cultural values
Effect Size
Families & family life
Inferences
Perceptions
Values
title The Perception of Family, City, and Country Values Is Often Biased
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