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  4. Perceptual broadening leads to more prosociality
 
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Perceptual broadening leads to more prosociality

Source
Frontiers in Psychology
Date Issued
2018-09-25
Author(s)
Mukherjee, Sumitava
Srinivasan, Narayanan
Kumar, Neeraj
Manjaly, Jaison A.  
DOI
10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01821
Volume
9
Issue
SEP
Abstract
A link between perceptual processing styles and (pro)social behavior has gathered supporting empirical evidence to show that people raised or trained in traditions of collectiveness, compassion, and prosocial beliefs are biased to the global level in perceptual processing. In this research, we studied the reciprocal link - whether contextually broadening perceptual scope of attention via global processing could make people more prosocial. We hypothesized that global processing linked previously to an interdependent compassionate self-orientation would make people more prosocial, compared to local processing. Four experiments manipulated perceptual scope through a Global-Local task using hierarchical stimuli. It was found that participants who performed a global processing perceptual task volunteered to donate more money across different donation frames, compared to those who performed a local processing task. While previous research showed prosocial mindsets lead to perceptual broadening, the current results suggest that perceptual broadening also leads to more prosociality, thus establishing a reciprocal link between perceptual broadening (attentional scope), and acting prosocially. It is proposed that perceptual scope of attention is one of the generic cognitive processes that underlie prosocial decisions. Explanations based on scope of attention can potentially be used as a framework that enables researchers to link the effects of different contextual cues on prosocial decisions.
Publication link
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01821/pdf
URI
http://repository.iitgn.ac.in/handle/IITG2025/22756
Subjects
Decision making | Donation | Global local processing | Prosocial | Scope of attention
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