ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
Menu
Culture

Tolerance makes you more trusting

Washington D.C. [U.S.A.], June 13 (ANI): People are more likely to trust and cooperate if they can tolerate ambiguity, a new research has claimed.

ANI Jun 13, 2018 17:49 IST googleads

Representative Image

Washington D.C. [U.S.A.], June 13 (ANI): People are more likely to trust and cooperate if they can tolerate ambiguity, a new research has claimed.
According to a study conducted by the Brown University, individuals who are tolerant of ambiguity - a kind of uncertainty in which the odds of an outcome are unknown - are more likely to cooperate with and trust other people.
Tolerance of ambiguity is distinct from tolerance of risk. With risk, the probability of each future outcome is known, said Oriel FeldmanHall, author of the study.
The many unknowns inherent in social situations make them inherently ambiguous, and the study finds that attitudes toward ambiguity are a predictor of one's willingness to engage in the potentially costly social behavior.
"If we consider how we go about navigating through our social worlds, we constantly need to figure out what other people are feeling and thinking," FeldmanHall said. "Even if someone tells us they are angry, they may not be telling us how angry they really are, or why they might be angry in the first place. In other words, we try to predict other people without ever having full access to their 'hidden' states."
"Because we do not have full knowledge of others' feelings or intentions, it can be hard to figure out whether it is best to trust another person with money or information, for example, or cooperate with them when one's well-being is at stake," FeldmanHall said.
That incomplete knowledge, she said, means "social exchanges are rife with ambiguous -- and not risky -- uncertainty: we can't apply specific probabilities to how a social exchange might unfold when we don't have certainty about whether the person has trustworthy intentions."
In the study, FeldmanHall and her colleagues performed a series of experiments in which 200 volunteers (106 female and 94 male participants) first completed a solo gambling game to assess their risk and uncertainty tolerance. They then played social games in which they had to decide whether to cooperate with or trust other players. Cooperation potentially benefited both players, but cooperators risked being betrayed and losing out.
In one experiment, the results showed that ambiguity tolerance was positively correlated with the amount of cooperation. In a second study, the researchers found that those who could tolerate ambiguity chose to trust a partner even if they knew the person did not always behave in a trustworthy way in the past.
Overall, being able to tolerate ambiguity predicted greater prosocial behavior, which prioritizes the welfare of other people and not just one's own self-benefit. By contrast, there was no association between risk tolerance and social decision-making.
When subjects were allowed to gather information about others - through gossiping about, engaging with or observing another person, for instance - and reduce the amount of ambiguous uncertainty around their social choices, the link between ambiguity tolerance and willingness to trust disappeared, according to the study.
FeldmanHall said that the findings on the dimension of the ambiguity in social decision-making, presented opportunities for further study.
"There are many questions this work made us think about, and we are currently conducting a number of experiments to explore this domain," FeldmanHall said. "As one example, we are trying to understand whether situations that have ambiguously uncertain outcomes influence how readily an individual will turn to their peers for guidance on how to behave. The more uncertain the environment, the more people might conform."
The study is published in the journal Nature Communications. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Fitness

World Endodontic Day: Save your natural teeth from extractions

World Endodontic Day: Save your natural teeth from extractions

Dentists are celebrating October 16th as World Endodontic Day to spread general awareness among people about the need to preserve their natural teeth from root canal infection and extractions.

Read More
Culture

Vishwakarma Puja 2023: Important aspects observed during this day

Vishwakarma Puja 2023: Important aspects observed during this day

‘Vishwakarma Jayanti’ is a Hindu festival that celebrates Lord Vishwakarma, the divine architect and craftsman of the gods. It is celebrated on September 17 this year.

Read More
Relationships

Moral reasoning displays characteristic patterns in brain: Study

Moral reasoning displays characteristic patterns in brain: Study

Philosophers, psychologists and neuroscientists have passionately argued whether moral judgments share something distinctive that separates them from non-moral matters. Moral monists claim that morality is unified by a common characteristic and that all moral issues involve concerns about harm.

Read More
Quirky

Youth with poor learning skills most vulnerable to email scams

Youth with poor learning skills most vulnerable to email scams

According to an international study published in the peer-reviewed British Journal of Educational Studies, disadvantaged youth are more vulnerable to email scams and require more protection.

Read More
Quirky

Extreme weather events linked to higher child marriage: Study

Extreme weather events linked to higher child marriage: Study

One of the negative consequences of catastrophic weather incidents around the world that most people might overlook is an increase in underage marriages.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.