Authors
James H Dulebohn, Robert B Davison, Seungcheol Austin Lee, Donald E Conlon, Gerry McNamara, Issidoros C Sarinopoulos
Publication date
2016/2
Journal
Journal of Applied Psychology
Volume
101
Issue
2
Pages
151
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Justice research examining gender differences has yielded contrasting findings. This study enlists advanced techniques in cognitive neuroscience (fMRI) to examine gender differences in brain activation patterns in response to procedural and distributive justice manipulations. We integrate social role, information processing, justice, and neuroscience literature to posit and test for gender differences in 2 neural subsystems known to be involved in the appraisal of self-relevant events. Results indicate that the relationship between justice information processing and neural activity in areas representing these subsystems is significantly influenced by gender, with greater activation for females than males during consideration of both procedural and distributive justice information. In addition, we find evidence that gender and distributive injustice interact to influence bargaining behavior, with females rejecting ultimatum …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JH Dulebohn, RB Davison, SA Lee, DE Conlon… - Journal of Applied Psychology, 2016