The effect of ingroup identification on conformity behavior in group decision-making: the flipping direction matters
Publication date
2023-01-03
Editors
Bui, Tung X.
Advisors
Supervisors
DOI
Document Type
Part of book
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License
cc_by_nc_nd
Abstract
Various social influences affect group decision-making processes. For instance, individuals may adapt their behavior to fit in with the group's majority opinion. Furthermore, ingroup favoritism may lead individuals to favor the ideas of ingroup members rather than the outgroup. So far, little is explored on how these phenomena of social conformity and ingroup favoritism manifest in group decision-making processes when a group has to decide in favor or against an item. We address such a scenario where the ‘flipping direction’ of conformity (in favor or against an item) matters. Specifically, we explore whether and how the ingroup favoritism manifests differently in terms of conformity behavior depending on the `flipping direction'. The results show that group inclusiveness does not play a role in the general tendency to conform. However, when it comes to a negative flipping direction, a higher feeling of group inclusiveness seems to play a role; yet, for individualist cultures only.
Keywords
cultural differences, flipping direction, ingroup identification, social conformity, General Engineering
Citation
Bauer, C & Ferwerda, B 2023, The effect of ingroup identification on conformity behavior in group decision-making: the flipping direction matters. in T X Bui (ed.), Proceedings of the 56th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, HICSS 2023. University of Hawaii, Maui, HI, USA, pp. 2242-2251, 56th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, Maui, Hawaii, United States, 3/01/23. < https://hdl.handle.net/10125/102908 >, conference