Vol. 36 No. 2 November, 2020 英文要約
- Title
- Effects of a belief in a just world on upstream reciprocity
- Author
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Ryohei UMETANI (Graduate School of Business Administration, Rissho University)
Akira GOTO (School of Information and Communication, Meiji University)
Isamu OKADA (Faculty of Business Administration, Soka University)
Hitoshi YAMAMOTO (Faculty of Business Administration, Rissho University/Graduate School of Business
Administration, Rissho University)
- Summary
- Upstream reciprocity refers to a person who has received help helping a third person instead of the
person who helped him/her. It is observed widely but lacks a theory explaining its mechanism. Theory suggests
that upstream reciprocity cannot maintain stable cooperation. Here we examine the possibility that the
strength of a belief in a just world, which is a cognitive bias, drives upstream reciprocity. We test the effects
on upstream reciprocity of a belief in a just world by conducting an upstream reciprocity game based on a
trust game. The results demonstrate that upstream reciprocity is explained by a belief in immanent justice, a
subconcept of a belief in a just world. These results shed light on a mechanism that explains why upstream
reciprocity is observed in the real world.
- Key words
- upstream reciprocity, belief in a just world, crowdsourcing experiments, prosocial behaviors,
cognitive bias
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- Title
- Switching helpers: Effect of number of helpers on help-seekers’ stress
- Author
-
Kengo FURUHASHI (Graduate School of Education and Human Development, Nagoya University)
Tasuku IGARASHI (Graduate School of Education and Human Development, Nagoya University)
- Summary
- Repeated help-seeking from the same helper produces gradually stronger hesitation. Therefore, switching
helpers in one’s social network could be an effective strategy. We conducted an online experiment to
examine whether people feel less stressed if they switch helpers in a repeated help-seeking situation. After
reading a vignette about a stressful situation (depression or unemployment), participants judged the level
of stress and chose a helper in their social network. Participants then received feedback that the situation
had not improved even after help had been given and repeated the choice five times. The results showed that
participants perceived lower stress in both depression and unemployment situations if they sought help from
a greater number of helpers after controlling for social network size and diversity of helpers. The effectiveness
of switching helpers and its mechanisms are discussed.
- Key words
- help-seeking behavior, stress, coping strategy, interpersonal choice, social support
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- Title
- The meaning of mementos and continuing bonds with the deceased
- Author
-
Yuko SHIRAIWA (University of Tokyo)
Mana KURIMOTO (University of Tokyo)
Kaori KARASAWA (University of Tokyo)
- Summary
- The items left by the deceased are often referred to as inherited items, of which those of particular
importance are sometimes called mementos. In this study, to examine our predictions that some of the
meaning bereaved families find in mementos are related to their continuing bonds with the deceased, we
asked 250 adult men and women who had experienced the deaths of people important to them to cooperate
in a questionnaire. It was shown that a memento mainly contains four meanings: 1) substance/functionality,
2) emotional/relationship-oriented, 3) respect for the will, and 4) symbolic of loss. Of these, 2) emotional/relationship-oriented and 3) respect for the will are positively related to the continuing bonds. These
suggest that the meaning a bereaved family finds in a memento may be a rough indication of the progress of
mourning.
- Key words
- bereavement, possession, objects the deceased left, process of mourning
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