Ignorance by Choice: A Meta-Analytic Review of the Underlying Motives of Willful Ignorance and Its Consequences

People sometimes avoid information about the impact of their actions as an excuse to be selfish. Such "willful ignorance" reduces altruistic behavior and has detrimental effects in many consumer and organizational contexts. We report the first meta-analysis on willful ignorance, testing th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychological bulletin 2023-09, Vol.149 (9-10), p.611-635
Hauptverfasser: Vu, Linh, Soraperra, Ivan, Leib, Margarita, van der Weele, Joël, Shalvi, Shaul
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container_end_page 635
container_issue 9-10
container_start_page 611
container_title Psychological bulletin
container_volume 149
creator Vu, Linh
Soraperra, Ivan
Leib, Margarita
van der Weele, Joël
Shalvi, Shaul
description People sometimes avoid information about the impact of their actions as an excuse to be selfish. Such "willful ignorance" reduces altruistic behavior and has detrimental effects in many consumer and organizational contexts. We report the first meta-analysis on willful ignorance, testing the robustness of its impact on altruistic behavior and examining its underlying motives. We analyze 33,603 decisions made by 6,531 participants in 56 different treatment effects, all employing variations of an experimental paradigm assessing willful ignorance. Meta-analytic results reveal that 40% of participants avoid easily obtainable information about the consequences of their actions on others, leading to a 15.6-percentage point decrease in altruistic behavior compared to when information is provided. We discuss the motives behind willful ignorance and provide evidence consistent with excuse-seeking behaviors to maintain a positive self-image. We investigate the moderators of willful ignorance and address the theoretical, methodological, and practical implications of our findings on who engages in willful ignorance, as well as when and why. Public Significance Statement We present the first meta-analysis on willful ignorance-when individuals avoid information about the negative consequences of their actions to maximize personal outcomes-covering 33,603 decisions made by 6,531 participants across 56 treatment effects. Results demonstrate that the ability to avoid such information decreases altruistic behavior, and that seemingly altruistic behavior may not reflect a true concern for others.
doi_str_mv 10.1037/bul0000398
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Such "willful ignorance" reduces altruistic behavior and has detrimental effects in many consumer and organizational contexts. We report the first meta-analysis on willful ignorance, testing the robustness of its impact on altruistic behavior and examining its underlying motives. We analyze 33,603 decisions made by 6,531 participants in 56 different treatment effects, all employing variations of an experimental paradigm assessing willful ignorance. Meta-analytic results reveal that 40% of participants avoid easily obtainable information about the consequences of their actions on others, leading to a 15.6-percentage point decrease in altruistic behavior compared to when information is provided. We discuss the motives behind willful ignorance and provide evidence consistent with excuse-seeking behaviors to maintain a positive self-image. We investigate the moderators of willful ignorance and address the theoretical, methodological, and practical implications of our findings on who engages in willful ignorance, as well as when and why. Public Significance Statement We present the first meta-analysis on willful ignorance-when individuals avoid information about the negative consequences of their actions to maximize personal outcomes-covering 33,603 decisions made by 6,531 participants across 56 treatment effects. 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source APA PsycARTICLES; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); MEDLINE
subjects Altruism
Avoidance
Behavior
Choice Behavior
Cognitive Dissonance
Ethics
Female
Human
Humans
Ignorance
Information
Male
Moderators
Morality
Motivation
Robustness
Selfimage
title Ignorance by Choice: A Meta-Analytic Review of the Underlying Motives of Willful Ignorance and Its Consequences
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