2015
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2563196
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Thick as Thieves? Dishonest Behavior and Egocentric Social Networks

Abstract: People experience a threat to their moral self-concept in the face of discrepancies between their moral values and their unethical behavior. We theorize that people's need to restore their view of themselves as moral activates thoughts of a high-density personal social network. Such thoughts also lead people to be more likely to engage in further unethical behavior. In five experiments, participants reflected on their past unethical behavior, and then completed a task designed to measure network density. Those… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(1 citation statement)
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References 49 publications
(48 reference statements)
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“…Mechanical Turk. In recent years, experiments on dishonesty have increasingly relied on samples recruited through Amazon's crowdsourcing platform, Mechanical Turk (MTurk; e.g., Biziouvan-Pol, Haenen, Novaro, Liberman, & Capraro, 2015;Charness, Blanco, Ezquerra, & Rodriguez-Lara, 2018;Gino & Wiltermuth, 2014;Gunia et al, 2014;Hildreth, Gino, & Bazerman, 2016;Kouchaki & Smith, 2014;Lee, Im, Parmar, & Gino, 2015;Peer, Acquisti, & Shalvi, 2014;Wang & Murnighan, 2017). To the best of our knowledge, only one study compared the levels of dishonesty among MTurk workers to those from other online platforms (Peer et al, 2017).…”
Section: Students Versus Nonstudentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mechanical Turk. In recent years, experiments on dishonesty have increasingly relied on samples recruited through Amazon's crowdsourcing platform, Mechanical Turk (MTurk; e.g., Biziouvan-Pol, Haenen, Novaro, Liberman, & Capraro, 2015;Charness, Blanco, Ezquerra, & Rodriguez-Lara, 2018;Gino & Wiltermuth, 2014;Gunia et al, 2014;Hildreth, Gino, & Bazerman, 2016;Kouchaki & Smith, 2014;Lee, Im, Parmar, & Gino, 2015;Peer, Acquisti, & Shalvi, 2014;Wang & Murnighan, 2017). To the best of our knowledge, only one study compared the levels of dishonesty among MTurk workers to those from other online platforms (Peer et al, 2017).…”
Section: Students Versus Nonstudentsmentioning
confidence: 99%