The Real World is the Ingroup World: A Normative Explanation of Response-Scale Effects in the Subjective Report of Behaviors
The ranges of response alternatives presented in frequency scales influence respondents’ behavioral estimates. This research aimed at complementing the existing cognitive interpretations of this scale effect (e.g., Schwarz, 1994). We propose a normative interpretation, according to which targets ass...
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doaj-340e160216d246dc9b7e71de6ba3fede2021-08-11T08:02:27ZengUbiquity PressInternational Review of Social Psychology2397-85702021-07-0134110.5334/irsp.426117The Real World is the Ingroup World: A Normative Explanation of Response-Scale Effects in the Subjective Report of BehaviorsFabio Lorenzi-Cioldi0Vincenzo Iacoviello1Clara Kulich2University of GenevaUniversity of GenevaUniversity of GenevaThe ranges of response alternatives presented in frequency scales influence respondents’ behavioral estimates. This research aimed at complementing the existing cognitive interpretations of this scale effect (e.g., Schwarz, 1994). We propose a normative interpretation, according to which targets associated with generic behavioral norms, and with ingroup norms, lead participants to rely more strongly on the scale’s frequency properties. Studies 1–2 showed stronger scale effects when participants reported behaviors over an extended (vs. short) time period, specifically when they reported behaviors of themselves (vs. people in general). Studies 3–6 showed that the use of a scale’s properties in self-reports increased when participants were led to believe that the scale’s frequency alternatives mirrored typical ingroup (vs. outgroup) behaviors. Finally, Study 7 demonstrated the role of ingroup identification in the production of these scale effects. Collectively, these findings suggest that behavioral estimates based on shared norms override memory scanning when behavior is difficult to retrieve, and when relevant ingroup information is available.https://www.rips-irsp.com/articles/426response scalesfrequency alternativessubjective statesnormsbehavioral reports |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Fabio Lorenzi-Cioldi Vincenzo Iacoviello Clara Kulich |
spellingShingle |
Fabio Lorenzi-Cioldi Vincenzo Iacoviello Clara Kulich The Real World is the Ingroup World: A Normative Explanation of Response-Scale Effects in the Subjective Report of Behaviors International Review of Social Psychology response scales frequency alternatives subjective states norms behavioral reports |
author_facet |
Fabio Lorenzi-Cioldi Vincenzo Iacoviello Clara Kulich |
author_sort |
Fabio Lorenzi-Cioldi |
title |
The Real World is the Ingroup World: A Normative Explanation of Response-Scale Effects in the Subjective Report of Behaviors |
title_short |
The Real World is the Ingroup World: A Normative Explanation of Response-Scale Effects in the Subjective Report of Behaviors |
title_full |
The Real World is the Ingroup World: A Normative Explanation of Response-Scale Effects in the Subjective Report of Behaviors |
title_fullStr |
The Real World is the Ingroup World: A Normative Explanation of Response-Scale Effects in the Subjective Report of Behaviors |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Real World is the Ingroup World: A Normative Explanation of Response-Scale Effects in the Subjective Report of Behaviors |
title_sort |
real world is the ingroup world: a normative explanation of response-scale effects in the subjective report of behaviors |
publisher |
Ubiquity Press |
series |
International Review of Social Psychology |
issn |
2397-8570 |
publishDate |
2021-07-01 |
description |
The ranges of response alternatives presented in frequency scales influence respondents’ behavioral estimates. This research aimed at complementing the existing cognitive interpretations of this scale effect (e.g., Schwarz, 1994). We propose a normative interpretation, according to which targets associated with generic behavioral norms, and with ingroup norms, lead participants to rely more strongly on the scale’s frequency properties. Studies 1–2 showed stronger scale effects when participants reported behaviors over an extended (vs. short) time period, specifically when they reported behaviors of themselves (vs. people in general). Studies 3–6 showed that the use of a scale’s properties in self-reports increased when participants were led to believe that the scale’s frequency alternatives mirrored typical ingroup (vs. outgroup) behaviors. Finally, Study 7 demonstrated the role of ingroup identification in the production of these scale effects. Collectively, these findings suggest that behavioral estimates based on shared norms override memory scanning when behavior is difficult to retrieve, and when relevant ingroup information is available. |
topic |
response scales frequency alternatives subjective states norms behavioral reports |
url |
https://www.rips-irsp.com/articles/426 |
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