Harbingers of foul play: A field study of gain/loss frames and regulatory fit in the NFL

Do people cheat more when they have something to gain, or when they have something to lose? The answer to this question isn’t straightforward, as research is mixed when it comes to understanding how unethical people will be when they might acquire something good versus avoid something bad. To wit, r...

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Main Authors: Evan Polman, Lyn M. Van Swol, Paul R. Hoban
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society for Judgment and Decision Making 2020-05-01
Series:Judgment and Decision Making
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.sjdm.org/17/17327b/jdm17327b.pdf
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spelling doaj-33027687a3694f8a9c779027af2cac062021-05-02T20:01:16ZengSociety for Judgment and Decision MakingJudgment and Decision Making1930-29752020-05-01153353370Harbingers of foul play: A field study of gain/loss frames and regulatory fit in the NFLEvan PolmanLyn M. Van SwolPaul R. HobanDo people cheat more when they have something to gain, or when they have something to lose? The answer to this question isn’t straightforward, as research is mixed when it comes to understanding how unethical people will be when they might acquire something good versus avoid something bad. To wit, research has found that people cheat more in a loss (vs. gain) frame, yet research on regulatory focus has found that people cheat more in a promotion focus (where the focus is on acquiring gains) than in a prevention focus (where the focus is on avoiding losses). Through a large-scale field study containing 332,239 observations including 27,350 transgressions, we address the contradictory results of gain/loss frames and regulatory focus on committing unethical behavior in a context that contains a high risk of detecting unethical behavior (NFL football games). Our results replicated the separate effects of more cheating in a loss frame, and more cheating in a promotion focus. Furthermore, our data revealed a heretofore undocumented crossover interaction, in accordance with regulatory fit, which could disentangle past results: Specifically, we found promotion focus is associated with more cheating in a loss (vs. gain) frame, whereas prevention focus is associated with more cheating in a gain (vs. loss) frame. In gridiron football, this translates to offensive players fouling more when their team is losing (vs. winning) and defensive players fouling more when their team is winning (vs. losing).http://journal.sjdm.org/17/17327b/jdm17327b.pdfunethical behavior cheating gain/loss frames regulatory fit field studies footballnakeywords
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Evan Polman
Lyn M. Van Swol
Paul R. Hoban
spellingShingle Evan Polman
Lyn M. Van Swol
Paul R. Hoban
Harbingers of foul play: A field study of gain/loss frames and regulatory fit in the NFL
Judgment and Decision Making
unethical behavior
cheating
gain/loss frames
regulatory fit
field studies
footballnakeywords
author_facet Evan Polman
Lyn M. Van Swol
Paul R. Hoban
author_sort Evan Polman
title Harbingers of foul play: A field study of gain/loss frames and regulatory fit in the NFL
title_short Harbingers of foul play: A field study of gain/loss frames and regulatory fit in the NFL
title_full Harbingers of foul play: A field study of gain/loss frames and regulatory fit in the NFL
title_fullStr Harbingers of foul play: A field study of gain/loss frames and regulatory fit in the NFL
title_full_unstemmed Harbingers of foul play: A field study of gain/loss frames and regulatory fit in the NFL
title_sort harbingers of foul play: a field study of gain/loss frames and regulatory fit in the nfl
publisher Society for Judgment and Decision Making
series Judgment and Decision Making
issn 1930-2975
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Do people cheat more when they have something to gain, or when they have something to lose? The answer to this question isn’t straightforward, as research is mixed when it comes to understanding how unethical people will be when they might acquire something good versus avoid something bad. To wit, research has found that people cheat more in a loss (vs. gain) frame, yet research on regulatory focus has found that people cheat more in a promotion focus (where the focus is on acquiring gains) than in a prevention focus (where the focus is on avoiding losses). Through a large-scale field study containing 332,239 observations including 27,350 transgressions, we address the contradictory results of gain/loss frames and regulatory focus on committing unethical behavior in a context that contains a high risk of detecting unethical behavior (NFL football games). Our results replicated the separate effects of more cheating in a loss frame, and more cheating in a promotion focus. Furthermore, our data revealed a heretofore undocumented crossover interaction, in accordance with regulatory fit, which could disentangle past results: Specifically, we found promotion focus is associated with more cheating in a loss (vs. gain) frame, whereas prevention focus is associated with more cheating in a gain (vs. loss) frame. In gridiron football, this translates to offensive players fouling more when their team is losing (vs. winning) and defensive players fouling more when their team is winning (vs. losing).
topic unethical behavior
cheating
gain/loss frames
regulatory fit
field studies
footballnakeywords
url http://journal.sjdm.org/17/17327b/jdm17327b.pdf
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