Factors impacting resource allocation decisions: the interaction of cognitive load and value preferences with knowledge of distributive injustice
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
This study attempts to validate and expand the deontological model of organizational
justice. The deontological model states that individuals experience a sense of moral
outrage when they witness others being treated unfairly. This feeling of deonance leads
them to react out against the perpetrator. The research in this area has shown that in
resource allocation situations, individuals will sacrifice their own resources in order to
punish a teammate’s past unfair behavior, the current study tested whether or not
deontological effects would occur when individuals were under high levels of cognitive
load. Results indicated that no significant interaction existed between fairness
information and cognitive load in predicting the choice of a selfish or sacrificial
allocation relative to an equal allocation. Secondly, the current study explored the role of
individual differences in value priorities in impacting deontological effects. Results
indicated that individual differences in Hedonism, Self-Direction, Universalism, and
Security interacted with fairness information in predicting an equal allocation choice over
a sacrificial allocation choice, but not in predicting an equal over a selfish allocation
choice. Specifically, when participants did not have any information about their
teammates, they made more equal allocations (as opposed to sacrificial allocations) when they valued hedonism and self-direction. However, when participants had the knowledge
that a teammate had acted unfairly, hedonism and self-direction did not predict choice.
Conversely, when participants knew a teammate had acted unfairly, they made more
sacrificial allocations (as opposed to equal allocations) when they valued universalism
and security. When they had no information about their partners, universalism and
security did not predict choice. An unexpected yet noteworthy finding was that although a
large majority of the participants chose to divide the resource pool evenly, verbalized
cognitions data suggested that this choice was largely driven by a concern for fairness.
Implications and suggestions for future research are discussed.
Description
Rights Access
Subject
social psychology
personality
personality psychology
