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Cognitive control and socially desirable behavior: The role of interpersonal impact
Authors:Marko Pitesa  Stefan Thau  Madan M Pillutla
Institution:1. Department of People, Organizations and Society, Grenoble Ecole de Management, 12 Rue Pierre Sémard, 38000 Grenoble, France;2. Organisational Behaviour Department, INSEAD, 1 Ayer Rajah Avenue, 138676 Singapore;3. Organisational Behaviour Subject Area, London Business School, Regent’s Park, London NW1 4SA, United Kingdom
Abstract:The current research reconciles two contradicting sets of findings on the role of cognitive control in socially desirable behaviors. One set of findings suggests that people are tempted by self-serving impulses and have to rely on cognitive control overriding such impulses to act in socially desirable ways. Another set of findings suggests people are guided by other-regarding impulses and cognitive control is not necessary to motivate socially desirable behaviors. We theorize that the dominant impulse is to behave in a socially desirable manner when the interpersonal impact of an action is salient, and that the dominant impulse is to behave in a self-serving manner when the interpersonal impact of an action is not salient. Studies 1–3 found that impairing participants’ cognitive control led to less socially desirable behavior when interpersonal impact was not salient, but more socially desirable behavior when interpersonal impact was salient. Study 4 demonstrates that behaving in a socially desirable manner causes cognitive control impairment when interpersonal impact is not salient. But, when interpersonal impact is salient, behaving in a self-serving manner impairs cognitive control. We discuss the implications of our findings for understanding and managing socially desirable behaviors.
Keywords:Socially desirable behavior  Cognitive control  Impulses  Cheating  Resource distributions
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