Cultural construction of success and epistemic motives moderate American-Chinese differences in reward allocation biases

When the relative contribution of the self and the group to a group success is unclear, Americans tend to exhibit a self-serving bias (rewarding the self more than what the self deserves), whereas the Chinese tend to exhibit an other-serving bias (rewarding the group more than the group deserves). I...

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Main Authors: Leung, Angela K.-Y., Kim, Young-Hoon, Tam, Kim-Pong, Chiu, Chi-yue, Zhang, Zhixue
Other Authors: Nanyang Business School
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2013
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/107247
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/18052
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1072472023-05-19T06:44:42Z Cultural construction of success and epistemic motives moderate American-Chinese differences in reward allocation biases Leung, Angela K.-Y. Kim, Young-Hoon Tam, Kim-Pong Chiu, Chi-yue Zhang, Zhixue Nanyang Business School DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology::Behaviorism When the relative contribution of the self and the group to a group success is unclear, Americans tend to exhibit a self-serving bias (rewarding the self more than what the self deserves), whereas the Chinese tend to exhibit an other-serving bias (rewarding the group more than the group deserves). In a study comparing the reward allocation biases of Americans and Chinese in different group outcome conditions, the authors showed that the abovementioned cultural difference is found (a) only for culturally congruent success experience (attaining approach goals for Americans and avoidance goals for Chinese) and (b) among individuals who are motivated by the need for cognitive closure to exhibit culturally typical responses. This finding has important implications for understanding the dynamic nature of cultural influences on social behaviors. 2013-12-05T01:50:49Z 2019-12-06T22:27:20Z 2013-12-05T01:50:49Z 2019-12-06T22:27:20Z 2012 2012 Journal Article Leung, A. K.-y., Kim, Y.-H., Zhang, Z., Tam, K.-P., & Chiu, C.-y. (2011). Cultural construction of success and epistemic motives moderate American-Chinese differences in reward allocation biases. Journal of cross-cultural psychology, 43(1), 46-52. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/107247 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/18052 10.1177/0022022111405660 en Journal of cross-cultural psychology
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology::Behaviorism
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology::Behaviorism
Leung, Angela K.-Y.
Kim, Young-Hoon
Tam, Kim-Pong
Chiu, Chi-yue
Zhang, Zhixue
Cultural construction of success and epistemic motives moderate American-Chinese differences in reward allocation biases
description When the relative contribution of the self and the group to a group success is unclear, Americans tend to exhibit a self-serving bias (rewarding the self more than what the self deserves), whereas the Chinese tend to exhibit an other-serving bias (rewarding the group more than the group deserves). In a study comparing the reward allocation biases of Americans and Chinese in different group outcome conditions, the authors showed that the abovementioned cultural difference is found (a) only for culturally congruent success experience (attaining approach goals for Americans and avoidance goals for Chinese) and (b) among individuals who are motivated by the need for cognitive closure to exhibit culturally typical responses. This finding has important implications for understanding the dynamic nature of cultural influences on social behaviors.
author2 Nanyang Business School
author_facet Nanyang Business School
Leung, Angela K.-Y.
Kim, Young-Hoon
Tam, Kim-Pong
Chiu, Chi-yue
Zhang, Zhixue
format Article
author Leung, Angela K.-Y.
Kim, Young-Hoon
Tam, Kim-Pong
Chiu, Chi-yue
Zhang, Zhixue
author_sort Leung, Angela K.-Y.
title Cultural construction of success and epistemic motives moderate American-Chinese differences in reward allocation biases
title_short Cultural construction of success and epistemic motives moderate American-Chinese differences in reward allocation biases
title_full Cultural construction of success and epistemic motives moderate American-Chinese differences in reward allocation biases
title_fullStr Cultural construction of success and epistemic motives moderate American-Chinese differences in reward allocation biases
title_full_unstemmed Cultural construction of success and epistemic motives moderate American-Chinese differences in reward allocation biases
title_sort cultural construction of success and epistemic motives moderate american-chinese differences in reward allocation biases
publishDate 2013
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/107247
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/18052
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