Authors
Leaf Van Boven, George Loewenstein, David Dunning
Publication date
2005/3/1
Journal
Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes
Volume
96
Issue
2
Pages
130-141
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
The results of two experiments support the thesis that emotional perspective taking entails two judgments: a prediction of one’s own preferences and decisions in a different emotional situation, and an adjustment of this prediction to accommodate perceived differences between self and others. Participants overestimated others’ willingness to engage in embarrassing public performances—miming (Experiment 1) and dancing (Experiment 2)—in exchange for money. Consistent with a dual judgment model, this overestimation was greater among participants facing a hypothetical rather than a real decision to perform. Further, participants’ predictions of others’ willingness to perform were more closely correlated with self-predictions than with participants’ estimates of others’ thoughts about the costs and benefits of performing.
Total citations
2004200520062007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320242759412132621191317964812116133
Scholar articles