Resumen
When multiple ways of deciding are laid out side-by-side, which does one favour? We conducted experiments in 12 countries (n = 3517 individuals; 13 languages; two Indigenous communities), with adults choosing among four decision strategies—personal intuition, private deliberation, friends’ advice or crowd wisdom—when working through six everyday dilemmas. In every society, self-reliant decisions (intuition or deliberation) were most commonly preferred and considered the wisest. Expectations for fellow citizens, however, were mixed: advice from friends was expected about as often as self-reliant routes. The self-reliance tilt was strongest in cultures and individuals high in independent self-construal and need for cognition, and weakest where interdependence and self-transcendent reflection were salient. The same patterns emerged when examining ratings of each strategy’s utility and oral protocols with Indigenous groups. Self-reliance appears the modal preference across cultures, but its strength is predictably tempered when cultures, and individuals within them, construe the self in relational rather than autonomous terms.
| Idioma original | Inglés |
|---|---|
| Número de artículo | 20251355 |
| Publicación | Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences |
| Volumen | 292 |
| N.º | 2052 |
| DOI | |
| Estado | Publicada - 13 ago. 2025 |
Huella
Profundice en los temas de investigación de 'Decision-making preferences for intuition, deliberation, friends or crowds in independent and interdependent societies'. En conjunto forman una huella única.Citar esto
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