Title of article
Know who youʹre up against: Counterpart identifiability enhances competitive behavior
Author/Authors
Haran، نويسنده , , Uriel and Ritov، نويسنده , , Ilana، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
7
From page
115
To page
121
Abstract
Research on pro-social behavior reports greater generosity and helping behavior toward merely identifiable persons, whose identities have been determined but not revealed, than toward unspecified, “statistical” targets. This work investigates whether identifiability can have a similar effect on behavior in competitive contexts. Data from three experiments show that providing arbitrary, non-identifying information about oneʹs competition enhances oneʹs goal-driven behavior: in competitive tasks, participants competing vs. merely identifiable counterparts displayed greater perseverance and performed better than participants whose counterparts were undetermined; in a dyadic bid setting, participants offered more money to outbid an identifiable counterpart for an auctioned product than an unspecified counterpart. In addition, we found that the effects of identifiability on competitorsʹ behavior were associated more strongly with the motivation not to lose than with the desire to win.
Keywords
Competitiveness , identifiability , Social comparison , motivation , auction
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Record number
1961568
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