| Literature DB >> 27814395 |
Yunhui Huang1, Yin Wu2,3.
Abstract
Growing evidence suggests that people overvalue their own objects compared to those owned by others, even when the two objects are virtually identical (i.e., ownership effect). Most researchers seem to consider self-enhancement as the underlying mechanism while neglecting the possible process of other-derogation. Here, we attempted to compare these two perspectives, adopting both implicit and neurocognitive methodologies to overcome social desirability confounds. In Study 1, we found that the ownership effect (measured by Implicit Association Test), was correlated with other-derogation but not with self-enhancement (both measured by the Go/No-Go Association Task). In Study 2, by using the event-related potentials (ERPs) technique, we showed that positive-framed other-owned objects elicited significant evaluative incongruity (i.e. indexed by late positive potentials) compared to negative-framed other-owned objects. In contrast, negative-framed self-owned objects did not evoke significant evaluative incongruity relative to positive-framed self-owned objects. Our research suggests that, in addition to the self-enhancement that has been widely demonstrated, it is also important to keep other-derogation in mind when examining the ownership effect.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27814395 PMCID: PMC5096666 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0166054
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
The Procedure of Implicit Association Test.
| Block | Task | Trials | Response key assignment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Left key | Right key | |||
| 1 | Attribute discrimination | 24 | Positive | Negative |
| 2 | Initial target discrimination | 24 | Self-owned | Other-owned |
| 3 | Initial combined task | 24 | Positive; Self-owned | Negative; Other-owned |
| 4 | Initial combined task | 48 | Positive; Self-owned | Negative; Other-owned |
| 5 | Reversed target discrimination | 48 | Other-owned | Self-owned |
| 6 | Reversed combined task | 24 | Positive; Other-owned | Negative; Self-owned |
| 7 | Reversed combined task | 48 | Positive; Other-owned | Negative; Self-owned |
Note. Positive = positive adjectives; Negative = negative adjectives; Self-owned = self-owned objects; Other-owned = other owned objects. Participants pressed the left and right key to classify the word that appeared on the screen. The order of the IAT blocks as well as the objects assigned to self-owned versus other-owned were counterbalanced between subjects.
The Procedure of Go/No-Go Association Task.
| Blocks | Tasks | Trials | Stimuli |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Practice | 16 | Targets: positive; Distractors: negative |
| 2 | 16 | Targets: negative; Distractors: positive | |
| 3 | 16 | Targets: self-owned; Distractors: other-owned | |
| 4 | 16 | Targets: other-owned; Distractors: self-owned | |
| 5 | Practice | 16 | Targets: positive or self-owned; Distractors: negative or other-owned |
| Main task 1 | 60 | Targets: positive or self-owned; Distractors: negative or other-owned | |
| 6 | Practice | 16 | Targets: negative or self-owned; Distractors: positive or other-owned |
| Main task 2 | 60 | Targets: negative or self-owned; Distractors: positive or other-owned | |
| 7 | Practice | 16 | Targets: positive or other-owned; Distractors: negative or self-owned |
| Main task 3 | 60 | Targets: positive or other-owned; Distractors: negative or self-owned | |
| 8 | Practice | 16 | Targets: negative or other-owned; Distractors: positive or self-owned |
| Main task 4 | 60 | Targets: negative or other-owned; Distractors: positive or self-owned |
Note. Positive = positive adjectives; Negative = negative adjectives; Self-owned = self-owned objects; Other-owned = other owned objects. Words were shown on the screen one-by-one. Participants pressed the space bar for signals, and did not press any key for noises. The order of Blocks 1, 2, 3, and 4 was random, while the order of Blocks 5, 6, 7, and 8 was also random.
Result Summary of the IAT and the GNAT.
| IAT | Self + Positive vs. Other+ Negative | Other + Positive vs. Self + Negative | t-test | Findings | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Latency | 821ms (197ms) | 949ms (247ms) | Paired t-test using log-transformed data, t(87) = 6.85 | 1.01E-09 | Ownership effect |
| D-2SD | .30 (.46) | One sample t-test against 0, t(87) = 6.13 | 2.54E-08 | ||
| GNAT | Positive | Negative | Paired t-test | Findings | |
| Self | 1.73 (.93) | 1.31 (.71) | 2.90E-05 | Self-enhancement | |
| Other | .91 (.75) | 1.47 (.84) | 6.91E-09 | Other-derogation | |
Fig 1The Relationship between IAT and GNAT.
The IAT effect = the D score in IAT; the GNAT effect for self-enhancement = d’self-possessions & positive−d’self-possessions & negative in the GNAT; the GNAT effect for other-derogation = d’other-possessions & negative−d’other-possessions & positive in the GNAT. Fitted lines were derived from linear regressions.
Fig 2ERP Responses at the Nine Central-Posterior Electrodes, Time-Locked to the Onset of Object Nouns.