In Wrong Anticipation - Miscalibrated Beliefs between Germans, Israelis, and Palestinians.

The reconcilability of actions and beliefs in inter-country relationships, either in business or politics, is of vital importance as incorrect beliefs on foreigners' behavior can have serious implications. We study a typical inter-country interaction by means of a controlled laboratory investme...

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Main Authors: Sebastian J Goerg, Heike Hennig-Schmidt, Gari Walkowitz, Eyal Winter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4911115?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-d44a17730cea4d33961413df951efb002020-11-24T21:52:13ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01116e015699810.1371/journal.pone.0156998In Wrong Anticipation - Miscalibrated Beliefs between Germans, Israelis, and Palestinians.Sebastian J GoergHeike Hennig-SchmidtGari WalkowitzEyal WinterThe reconcilability of actions and beliefs in inter-country relationships, either in business or politics, is of vital importance as incorrect beliefs on foreigners' behavior can have serious implications. We study a typical inter-country interaction by means of a controlled laboratory investment game experiment in Germany, Israel and Palestine involving 400 student participants in total. An investor has to take a risky decision in a foreign country that involves transferring money to an investee/allocator. We found a notable constellation of calibrated and un-calibrated beliefs. Within each country, transfer standards exist, which investees correctly anticipate within their country. However, across countries these standards differ. By attributing the standard of their own environment to the other countries investees are remarkably bad in predicting foreign investors' behavior. The tendency to ignore this potential difference can be a source of misinterpreting motives in cross-country interaction. Foreigners might perceive behavior as unfavorable or favorable differentiation, even though-unknown to them-investors actually treat fellow-country people and foreigners alike.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4911115?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sebastian J Goerg
Heike Hennig-Schmidt
Gari Walkowitz
Eyal Winter
spellingShingle Sebastian J Goerg
Heike Hennig-Schmidt
Gari Walkowitz
Eyal Winter
In Wrong Anticipation - Miscalibrated Beliefs between Germans, Israelis, and Palestinians.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Sebastian J Goerg
Heike Hennig-Schmidt
Gari Walkowitz
Eyal Winter
author_sort Sebastian J Goerg
title In Wrong Anticipation - Miscalibrated Beliefs between Germans, Israelis, and Palestinians.
title_short In Wrong Anticipation - Miscalibrated Beliefs between Germans, Israelis, and Palestinians.
title_full In Wrong Anticipation - Miscalibrated Beliefs between Germans, Israelis, and Palestinians.
title_fullStr In Wrong Anticipation - Miscalibrated Beliefs between Germans, Israelis, and Palestinians.
title_full_unstemmed In Wrong Anticipation - Miscalibrated Beliefs between Germans, Israelis, and Palestinians.
title_sort in wrong anticipation - miscalibrated beliefs between germans, israelis, and palestinians.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description The reconcilability of actions and beliefs in inter-country relationships, either in business or politics, is of vital importance as incorrect beliefs on foreigners' behavior can have serious implications. We study a typical inter-country interaction by means of a controlled laboratory investment game experiment in Germany, Israel and Palestine involving 400 student participants in total. An investor has to take a risky decision in a foreign country that involves transferring money to an investee/allocator. We found a notable constellation of calibrated and un-calibrated beliefs. Within each country, transfer standards exist, which investees correctly anticipate within their country. However, across countries these standards differ. By attributing the standard of their own environment to the other countries investees are remarkably bad in predicting foreign investors' behavior. The tendency to ignore this potential difference can be a source of misinterpreting motives in cross-country interaction. Foreigners might perceive behavior as unfavorable or favorable differentiation, even though-unknown to them-investors actually treat fellow-country people and foreigners alike.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4911115?pdf=render
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