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A Secondary Replication Attempt of Stereotype Susceptibility ()
In: Social psychology, Band 45, Heft 3, S. 199-201
ISSN: 2151-2590
Prior work suggests that awareness of stereotypes about a person's in-group can affect a person's behavior and performance when they complete a stereotype-relevant task, a phenomenon called stereotype susceptibility ( Shih, Pittinsky, & Ambady, 1999 ). In a preregistered confirmatory design, we found that priming Asian women with social identities associated with math stereotypes did not influence their performance on a subsequent mathematics exam, and hypothesized moderators did not account for the effect. The conditions necessary to obtain the original results are not yet fully understood.
When Goods Were Odds: Do People Prefer Goods that Stem from Uncertainty?
In: The Wharton School Research Paper
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The Overblown Implications Effect
In: Journal of Personality & Social Psychology
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Working paper
Giving Suggestions: Using Quantity Requests to Increase Donations
In: Journal of consumer research: JCR ; an interdisciplinary journal, Band 50, Heft 1, S. 190-210
ISSN: 1537-5277
Abstract
Across seven studies (N = 9,028), we provide evidence that quantity requests, wherein people consider multiple choice options of how much to donate (e.g., $5, $10, or $15), increase contributions compared to open-ended requests. Specifically, quantity requests encourage greater donations (study 1), even when respondents can passively choose not to donate (study 2) and even when the donation is directed toward a less popular cause (study 3). This increase in donations holds for quantity requests that start with both lower (e.g., $1) or higher (e.g., $10) donation amount options (study 4). Quantity requests also outperform other requests with multiple nonquantity donation options (e.g., multiple options of when to donate or to which charity branch to direct a donation; study 5). We offer evidence that quantity requests are effective because they simplify donation decisions by communicating normative donation magnitudes (studies 6 and 7). This clarified norm of donation magnitude boosts donation rates, which in turn leads to greater total donations. Our findings offer new conceptual insights into how quantity requests increase contributions as well as practical implications for charitable organizations to optimize contributions by leveraging the use of quantity requests.
Commentary and Rejoinder on and
In: Social psychology, Band 45, Heft 4, S. 335-338
ISSN: 2151-2590