2022
DOI: 10.1007/s12144-022-03276-8
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Does similarity trigger cooperation? Dyadic effect of similarity in social value orientation and cognitive resources on cooperation

Abstract: Although a considerable amount of research has demonstrated a robust relationship between social value orientation and cooperation, these studies may be limited by focusing solely on the individual. Building on the growing literature documenting the effect of group formation on cooperation and personality similarity on negotiation, the present study explored whether similarity in social value orientation (both being pro-social or pro-self) leads to more cooperation in social dilemmas among dyad members. Drawin… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 65 publications
(83 reference statements)
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“…The higher Machiavellian and competitiveness traits in this group may also have contributed to the defective and less cooperative behavior as observed in previous game theory tasks 42,53,74,75 . Similar to our task, the temptation to exploit others predicted cooperation in the CG task 76 , while in the PD task, the possibility of achieving dyad-level cooperation was larger in cooperative dyads, heterogeneous dyads, and non-cooperative (pro-self) dyads in descendent order, but the difference was not significant 37 . This pattern has been replicated in children where cooperative dyads used a turn-taking strategy in a modified version of the CG, while among pairs who did not adopt that strategy, the dominant children got higher payoffs 77 .…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 50%
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“…The higher Machiavellian and competitiveness traits in this group may also have contributed to the defective and less cooperative behavior as observed in previous game theory tasks 42,53,74,75 . Similar to our task, the temptation to exploit others predicted cooperation in the CG task 76 , while in the PD task, the possibility of achieving dyad-level cooperation was larger in cooperative dyads, heterogeneous dyads, and non-cooperative (pro-self) dyads in descendent order, but the difference was not significant 37 . This pattern has been replicated in children where cooperative dyads used a turn-taking strategy in a modified version of the CG, while among pairs who did not adopt that strategy, the dominant children got higher payoffs 77 .…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 50%
“…When studying cooperation and competition, which are intrinsically interpersonal activities, a focus on only one person within a dyad is theoretically deficient 37 . We need to characterize behavior in the context of with whom someone is interacting.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This study associates “luxury” and “sustainable” with pro-self and prosocial orientations, using the SVO framework to understand consumers’ sustainable luxury consumption. The SVO framework has been widely used in behavioral science research, including studies on helping behavior and prosocial/pro-environmental behavior (Sun et al , 2021; Zhang et al , 2023). As a personality trait, SVO reflects individual differences (Messick and McClintock, 1968), with varying degrees between pro-self and prosocial orientations (Bogaert et al , 2010).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To adequately study interpersonal exchange, it is essential to focus on both individuals within a dyad 32 . The willingness to cooperate or compete is influenced by the partner’s personality 33 , 34 .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%