| Literature DB >> 27101931 |
Cuizhen Liu1,2, Jing Wen Chai2, Rongjun Yu1,2,3,4.
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that task-unrelated emotions induced incidentally exert carryover effects on individuals' subsequent decisions in financial negotiations. However, the specificity of these emotion effects are not clear. In three experiments, we systematically investigated the role of seven transiently induced basic emotions (disgust, sadness, anger, fear, happiness, surprise and neutral) on rejection of unfair offers using the ultimatum game. We found that all negative emotions (disgust, sadness, anger and fear), but not happiness or surprise, significantly increased rejection rates, suggesting that the effect of incidental negative emotions on fairness is not specific to the type of negative emotion. Our findings highlight the role of fleeting emotions in biasing decision-making processes and suggest that all incidental negative emotions exert similar effects on fairness sensitivity, possibly by potentiating attention towards negative aspects of the situation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27101931 PMCID: PMC4840371 DOI: 10.1038/srep24892
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
The main findings of previous studies and the current study.
| Disgust | Sadness | Anger | Fear | Happiness | Surprise | Neutral | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Harle & Sanfey | ↑ | − | − | ||||
| Andrade & Ariely | ↑ (vs. happy) | ||||||
| Moretti & Pellegrino | ↑ | − | − | ||||
| Bonini | ↓ | − | |||||
| Harlé | ↑ | − | − | ||||
| The present study | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | − | − | − |
Figure 1Experimental task design.
First, an emotional face (varied between disgusted, sad and neutral emotions) was presented for 3 seconds. Then the proposer split a sum of money in 1 second and the given offer was displayed for 2 second. Participants determined to accept or reject this offer within 4 seconds followed by corresponding outcome feedback. A few seconds later, participants judged the gender of the face presented earlier. Note: Faces applied in our experiment were drawn from the Chinese Affective Face Picture System (CAFPS). However, the neutral face in this figure are not from the CAFPS, but is comparable to the ones used in the task. Cuizhen Liu took and processed the face image of Shanshan Liu, who gave written consent for publication in Scientific Reports.
Figure 2Rejection rates of unfair offers (after emerging two unfair levels) in three priming conditions for each experiment.
Figure 3Mean intensity scores for three kind of priming faces on five emotions in each experiment.