Wherefore art thou competitors? How situational affordances help differentiate among prosocials, individualists, and competitors

The Triple Dominance Measure (choosing between prosocial, individualistic, and competitive options) and the Slider Measure (“sliding” between various orientations, for example, from individualistic to prosocial) are two widely used techniques to measure social value orientation, that is, the weight...

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Main Authors: LIU, Y., STIVERS, A.W., MURPHY, R.O., VAN DOESUM, N.J., JOIREMAN, J., GALLUCCI, M., AHARONOV-MAJAR, E., ATHENSTAEDT, U., BAI, L., BÖHM, R., BUCHAN, N.R., CHEN, X.-P., DUMONT, K.B., ENGELMANN, J.B., LI, Norman P., EUH, H., FIEDLER, S., FRIESEN, J., GÄCHTER, S., GARCIA, C.
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2024
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/4140
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/5399/viewcontent/Wherefore_art_thou_competitors_pvoa_cc_by.pdf
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spelling sg-smu-ink.soss_research-53992025-01-27T03:46:30Z Wherefore art thou competitors? How situational affordances help differentiate among prosocials, individualists, and competitors LIU, Y. STIVERS, A.W. MURPHY, R.O. VAN DOESUM, N.J. JOIREMAN, J. GALLUCCI, M. AHARONOV-MAJAR, E. ATHENSTAEDT, U. BAI, L. BÖHM, R. BUCHAN, N.R. CHEN, X.-P. DUMONT, K.B. ENGELMANN, J.B. LI, Norman P., EUH, H. FIEDLER, S. FRIESEN, J. GÄCHTER, S. GARCIA, C. The Triple Dominance Measure (choosing between prosocial, individualistic, and competitive options) and the Slider Measure (“sliding” between various orientations, for example, from individualistic to prosocial) are two widely used techniques to measure social value orientation, that is, the weight individuals assign to own and others’ outcomes in interdependent situations. Surprisingly, there is only moderate correspondence between these measures, but it is unclear why and what the implications are for identifying individual differences in social value orientation. Using a dataset of 8021 participants from 31 countries and regions, this study revealed that the Slider Measure identified fewer competitors than the Triple Dominance Measure, accounting for approximately one-third of the non-correspondence between the two measures. This is (partially) because many of the Slider items do not afford a competitive option. In items where competition is combined with individualism, competitors tended to make the same choices as individualists. Futhermore, we demonstrated the uniqueness of competitors. Compared to prosocials and individualists, competitors exhibited lower levels of both social mindfulness and trust. Overall, the present work highlights the importance of situational affordances in measuring personality, the benefits of distinguishing between individualists and competitors, and the importance of utilizing a measure that distinguishes between these two proself orientations. 2024-11-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/4140 info:doi/10.1177/08902070241298850 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/5399/viewcontent/Wherefore_art_thou_competitors_pvoa_cc_by.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Research Collection School of Social Sciences eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University social value orientation measurement situational affordances competitors Personality and Social Contexts Social Psychology
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic social value orientation
measurement
situational affordances
competitors
Personality and Social Contexts
Social Psychology
spellingShingle social value orientation
measurement
situational affordances
competitors
Personality and Social Contexts
Social Psychology
LIU, Y.
STIVERS, A.W.
MURPHY, R.O.
VAN DOESUM, N.J.
JOIREMAN, J.
GALLUCCI, M.
AHARONOV-MAJAR, E.
ATHENSTAEDT, U.
BAI, L.
BÖHM, R.
BUCHAN, N.R.
CHEN, X.-P.
DUMONT, K.B.
ENGELMANN, J.B.
LI, Norman P.,
EUH, H.
FIEDLER, S.
FRIESEN, J.
GÄCHTER, S.
GARCIA, C.
Wherefore art thou competitors? How situational affordances help differentiate among prosocials, individualists, and competitors
description The Triple Dominance Measure (choosing between prosocial, individualistic, and competitive options) and the Slider Measure (“sliding” between various orientations, for example, from individualistic to prosocial) are two widely used techniques to measure social value orientation, that is, the weight individuals assign to own and others’ outcomes in interdependent situations. Surprisingly, there is only moderate correspondence between these measures, but it is unclear why and what the implications are for identifying individual differences in social value orientation. Using a dataset of 8021 participants from 31 countries and regions, this study revealed that the Slider Measure identified fewer competitors than the Triple Dominance Measure, accounting for approximately one-third of the non-correspondence between the two measures. This is (partially) because many of the Slider items do not afford a competitive option. In items where competition is combined with individualism, competitors tended to make the same choices as individualists. Futhermore, we demonstrated the uniqueness of competitors. Compared to prosocials and individualists, competitors exhibited lower levels of both social mindfulness and trust. Overall, the present work highlights the importance of situational affordances in measuring personality, the benefits of distinguishing between individualists and competitors, and the importance of utilizing a measure that distinguishes between these two proself orientations.
format text
author LIU, Y.
STIVERS, A.W.
MURPHY, R.O.
VAN DOESUM, N.J.
JOIREMAN, J.
GALLUCCI, M.
AHARONOV-MAJAR, E.
ATHENSTAEDT, U.
BAI, L.
BÖHM, R.
BUCHAN, N.R.
CHEN, X.-P.
DUMONT, K.B.
ENGELMANN, J.B.
LI, Norman P.,
EUH, H.
FIEDLER, S.
FRIESEN, J.
GÄCHTER, S.
GARCIA, C.
author_facet LIU, Y.
STIVERS, A.W.
MURPHY, R.O.
VAN DOESUM, N.J.
JOIREMAN, J.
GALLUCCI, M.
AHARONOV-MAJAR, E.
ATHENSTAEDT, U.
BAI, L.
BÖHM, R.
BUCHAN, N.R.
CHEN, X.-P.
DUMONT, K.B.
ENGELMANN, J.B.
LI, Norman P.,
EUH, H.
FIEDLER, S.
FRIESEN, J.
GÄCHTER, S.
GARCIA, C.
author_sort LIU, Y.
title Wherefore art thou competitors? How situational affordances help differentiate among prosocials, individualists, and competitors
title_short Wherefore art thou competitors? How situational affordances help differentiate among prosocials, individualists, and competitors
title_full Wherefore art thou competitors? How situational affordances help differentiate among prosocials, individualists, and competitors
title_fullStr Wherefore art thou competitors? How situational affordances help differentiate among prosocials, individualists, and competitors
title_full_unstemmed Wherefore art thou competitors? How situational affordances help differentiate among prosocials, individualists, and competitors
title_sort wherefore art thou competitors? how situational affordances help differentiate among prosocials, individualists, and competitors
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2024
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/4140
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/5399/viewcontent/Wherefore_art_thou_competitors_pvoa_cc_by.pdf
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