Do people have accurate beliefs about the behavioral consequences of incidental emotions? Evidence from trust games
Author
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Kausel Elicagaray, Edgar
Author
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Connolly, Terry
es_CL
Admission date
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2014-12-22T12:53:13Z
Available date
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2014-12-22T12:53:13Z
Publication date
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2014
Cita de ítem
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Journal of Economic Psychology 42 (2014) 96–111
en_US
Identifier
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DOI: 10.1016/j.joep.2014.02.002
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/128711
General note
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Artículo de publicación ISI
en_US
Abstract
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The present study examined people’s expectations of how incidental emotions could shape
others’ reciprocity in trusting situations, whether these expectations affect people’s own
behavior, and how accurate these expectations are. Study 1 explored people’s beliefs about
the effects of different incidental emotions on another person’s trustworthiness in general.
In Studies 2 and 3, senders in trust games faced angry, guilty, grateful, or emotionally neutral
responders. Participants who were told about their counterpart’s emotional state acted
consistently with their beliefs about how these emotions would affect the other’s trustworthiness.
These beliefs were not always correct, however. There were significant deviations
between the expected behavior of angry responders and such responders’ actual behavior.
These findings raise the possibility that one player’s knowledge of the other’s emotional
state may lead to action choices that yield poor outcomes for both players.