序贯谈判中主观价值的阴暗面:自豪与愤怒的中介作用

The dark side of subjective value in sequential negotiations: The mediating role of pride and anger.

Journal of Applied Psychology · 2017
被引 26
FT 50ABS 4★

中文导读

研究发现,在短时间内与不同对手进行的序贯谈判中,上一轮谈判的主观价值会通过自豪和愤怒的溢出效应,负向影响下一轮谈判的客观结果。

Abstract

Scholars who study negotiation increasingly recognize the importance of social context, seeing negotiations not merely as 1-shot interactions but as influenced by what came before. Under this longitudinal conceptualization of negotiation, a number of recent studies demonstrate that social psychological outcomes from prior negotiations are positively related to economic performance in subsequent negotiations when negotiating repeatedly with the same counterpart. In this report, we investigate a counterexample in the context of "sequential negotiations," which we define as multiple negotiation sessions that occur within a short time frame but facing different counterparts in each session. We theorize, in sequential negotiations, that subjective value from 1 negotiation should be negatively related to objective outcomes in a subsequent negotiation because of spillover effects of incidental anger and pride. We test this model in 2 studies: a multiround lab study with a student sample and a longitudinal field study with employees negotiating as part of their jobs. Results from both studies support the hypothesized negative relationship between subjective value from an initial negotiation and the objective outcome from a subsequent negotiation with a different counterpart. The mediating role of pride is supported partially in Study 1 and fully in Study 2, whereas the mediating role of anger is not supported in either study. We discuss implications for negotiation theory and practice. (PsycINFO Database Record

谈判社会心理学情绪组织行为