903 research outputs found
Online_supplementary_materials – Supplemental material for Joking about ourselves: Effects of disparaging humor on ingroup stereotyping
Supplemental material, Online_supplementary_materials for Joking about ourselves: Effects of disparaging humor on ingroup stereotyping by Catalina Argüello Gutiérrez, Hugo Carretero-Dios, Guillermo B. Willis, and Miguel Moya in Group Processes & Intergroup Relations</p
sj-docx-1-gpi-10.1177_13684302221095338 – Supplemental material for Economic inequality shapes the agency–communion content of gender stereotypes
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-gpi-10.1177_13684302221095338 for Economic inequality shapes the agency–communion content of gender stereotypes by Eva Moreno-Bella, Guillermo B. Willis, Angélica Quiroga-Garza and Miguel Moya in Group Processes & Intergroup Relations</p
SPPS811500_suppl_mat - The Vicious Cycle of Economic Inequality: The Role of Ideology in Shaping the Relationship Between “What Is” and “What Ought to Be” in 41 Countries
SPPS811500_suppl_mat for The Vicious Cycle of Economic Inequality: The Role of Ideology in Shaping the Relationship Between “What Is” and “What Ought to Be” in 41 Countries by Efraín García-Sánchez, Jojanneke Van der Toorn, Rosa Rodríguez-Bailón, and Guillermo B. Willis in Social Psychological and Personality Science</p
sj-docx-1-spp-10.1177_19485506231221310 – Supplemental material for Economic Inequality and Unfairness Evaluations of Income Distribution Negatively Predict Political and Social Trust: Evidence From Latin America Over 23 Years
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-spp-10.1177_19485506231221310 for Economic Inequality and Unfairness Evaluations of Income Distribution Negatively Predict Political and Social Trust: Evidence From Latin America Over 23 Years by Efraín García-Sánchez, Juan Diego García-Castro, Guillermo B. Willis and Rosa Rodríguez-Bailón in Social Psychological and Personality Science</p
supplementary material, Final_Supplements_EIandEuropeanIdentity – Two Countries in Crisis: Economic Inequality in the EU and Disidentification With Europe in Spain and Greece
supplementary material, Final_Supplements_EIandEuropeanIdentity for Two Countries in Crisis: Economic Inequality in the EU and Disidentification With Europe in Spain and Greece by Katerina Petkanopoulou, Ángel Sánchez-Rodríguez, Guillermo B. Willis, Xenia Chryssochoou, and Rosa Rodríguez-Bailón in Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology</p
The Effect of Economic Inequality on Individuals' Cooperative Behavior Using an Economic Experiment
In this study we tested whether economic inequality and democratic choices affected individuals' cooperative behavior. We expected two main effects: First one of inequality on cooperation and another of democratic choice on cooperation. We used the public goods game (N = 479), in which participants were given a certain number of tokens and decided how many they wanted to keep in their private fund and how many they wanted to share in the public goods. To manipulate economic inequality, we distributed participants’ initial tokens either equally, unequally or very unequally. To manipulation democratic choice, we presented a prescriptive norm to punish the free-riders, either chosen by the participants or imposed. Cooperative behavior was measured by the number of tokens that participants invested in the public goods ark. A mix design was used, including one between participants manipulated factor (democratic choice) and other one manipulated within participants (inequality distribution). As predicted, our findings showed a significant difference between the high and the low inequality condition on cooperative behavior. Participants cooperate with more tokens in the low (vs. high) inequality condition. However, when the prescriptive norm was introduced, this difference between inequality conditions disappeared. No differences in cooperation were found when the prescriptive norm was either democratically voted or imposed. Our findings showed evidence about the reduction of cooperation in unequal contexts. Additionally, prescriptive norms could reduce differences in cooperative behavior independently of inequality levels. The results show that the study of prescriptive norms could contribute to foment redistribution and tax compliance.Peer reviewed45
RRR - Mazar_Srull - WILLIS
Our laboratory's Implementation of the Mazar_Srull RRR protoco
RRR - Mazar_Srull - WILLIS
Our laboratory's Implementation of the Mazar_Srull RRR protoco
Economic inequality and masculinity-femininity: The prevailing perceived traits in higher unequal contexts are masculine
Material: Moreno-Bella, Willis, & Moya (2019). Economic Inequality and Masculinity-Femininity: The prevailing perceived traits in higher unequal contexts are masculin
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