Effect of hunger and potential rewards on corruption

Past studies have consistently revealed that the lack of financial or physiological resources leads to an increase in resource-seeking behavior. For instance, low subjective socioeconomic status (SSES) is adequate to stimulate increased liking and consumption and for high-caloric and high-energy foo...

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Main Author: Yew, Joey May June
Other Authors: Cheon Bobby K.
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2018
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73895
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-738952019-12-10T12:08:06Z Effect of hunger and potential rewards on corruption Yew, Joey May June Cheon Bobby K. School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences Past studies have consistently revealed that the lack of financial or physiological resources leads to an increase in resource-seeking behavior. For instance, low subjective socioeconomic status (SSES) is adequate to stimulate increased liking and consumption and for high-caloric and high-energy foods. In addition, it has been found that physiological deprivation (i.e., hunger) drives individuals to engage in domain-specific unethical behavior (i.e., cheating for food). However, it is unknown whether physiological deprivation (i.e., hunger) would lead to non-need-related resource seeking behavior (i.e., corruption), and how SSES may moderate this relationship. Hence, the present study examined how hunger affected corruptive tendency in individuals. Ninety-three Singapore undergraduates were randomly allocated to either the fasted or control condition, in which participants in the fasted condition were instructed to fast the night before the experiment. Five captions were presented to all participants and a caption was accompanied with a hypothetical bribe to capture their corruptive tendency in terms of their likelihood to accept the bribe. Individuals’ SSES were also measured using the adapted MacArthur’s SES scale. There were no significant differences between fasted and control condition in the likelihood to accept bribe, and neither did SSES moderated such relationship. Limitations, future directions, theoretical and practical implications of this study were discussed. Bachelor of Arts 2018-04-19T02:09:17Z 2018-04-19T02:09:17Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73895 en Nanyang Technological University 56 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences
Yew, Joey May June
Effect of hunger and potential rewards on corruption
description Past studies have consistently revealed that the lack of financial or physiological resources leads to an increase in resource-seeking behavior. For instance, low subjective socioeconomic status (SSES) is adequate to stimulate increased liking and consumption and for high-caloric and high-energy foods. In addition, it has been found that physiological deprivation (i.e., hunger) drives individuals to engage in domain-specific unethical behavior (i.e., cheating for food). However, it is unknown whether physiological deprivation (i.e., hunger) would lead to non-need-related resource seeking behavior (i.e., corruption), and how SSES may moderate this relationship. Hence, the present study examined how hunger affected corruptive tendency in individuals. Ninety-three Singapore undergraduates were randomly allocated to either the fasted or control condition, in which participants in the fasted condition were instructed to fast the night before the experiment. Five captions were presented to all participants and a caption was accompanied with a hypothetical bribe to capture their corruptive tendency in terms of their likelihood to accept the bribe. Individuals’ SSES were also measured using the adapted MacArthur’s SES scale. There were no significant differences between fasted and control condition in the likelihood to accept bribe, and neither did SSES moderated such relationship. Limitations, future directions, theoretical and practical implications of this study were discussed.
author2 Cheon Bobby K.
author_facet Cheon Bobby K.
Yew, Joey May June
format Final Year Project
author Yew, Joey May June
author_sort Yew, Joey May June
title Effect of hunger and potential rewards on corruption
title_short Effect of hunger and potential rewards on corruption
title_full Effect of hunger and potential rewards on corruption
title_fullStr Effect of hunger and potential rewards on corruption
title_full_unstemmed Effect of hunger and potential rewards on corruption
title_sort effect of hunger and potential rewards on corruption
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73895
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