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Purpose: Most studies have supported the view that individuals prefer to reward the in-group and discriminate against the out-group in response to unfair offers in the Ultimatum Game. However, the current study advanced a different view, that is, the "black sheep effect", in which in-group members were punished more severely compared with out-group members. This study aimed to incorporate proposer identity and allocation motive as possible explanations for offer rejection.
Methods: In the current study, the in-group and out-group identities were distinguished by their health condition, and the allocation motive was defined according to its benefit maximization. With a total of 89 healthy college student participants, a mixed design of 2 (proposer identity: out-group vs in-group) × 2 (allocation motive: selfish vs random) × 2 (offer type: unfair vs fair) was used in the Ultimatum Game. Event-related potential (ERP) technology was used, and ERPs were recorded while participants processed the task.
Results: The behavioral result showed that the "black sheep effect" was found on the fair offer when a random allocation motive was used. Our ERP result suggested that feedback-related negativity (FRN) and P300 were modulated by proposer identity but not by allocation motive. However, the allocation motive interacted with proposer identity affecting FRN and P300 when the fair offer was proposed.
Conclusion: These findings demonstrated that the "black sheep effect" was related to the experience of the out-group member, such as disadvantage or distress, but it was also modulated by allocation motive. Meanwhile, the out-group (depressed college students) captured more attention because they violated individual expectations, according to the P300. This finding plays an integral role in understanding the mechanism of response to the "black sheep effect".
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http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PRBM.S420608 | DOI Listing |
Afr J Prim Health Care Fam Med
August 2025
Department of Family and Emergency Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Stellenbosch University, Cape Town.
Background: Mental health disorders are increasing globally. In South Africa, primary healthcare (PHC) services are tasked with mental healthcare, with limited resources. A task-sharing approach between PHC role-players has also been met with barriers, including negative attitudes towards mental health care, organisational constraints and insufficiently trained staff.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
September 2025
Faculty of Business, Economics, and Statistics, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Charitable donations are often the most suitable available way to incentivize study participation, yet their optimal design remains unclear. In a preregistered field experiment, we invited 6,711 psychology faculty at top-200 universities to complete a survey in exchange for a US $5 donation to test whether allowing prospective participants to earmark the donation for a specific purpose increases study participation. Contrary to preregistered hypotheses derived from previous literature, the results showed no significant increase in study participation rates when participants could earmark their donation compared to a random allocation of funds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Artif Intell
August 2025
Aviation Industry Development Research Center of China, Beijing, China.
Autonomous systems operating in high-dimensional environments increasingly rely on prioritization heuristics to allocate attention and assess risk, yet these mechanisms can introduce cognitive biases such as salience, spatial framing, and temporal familiarity that influence decision-making without altering the input or accessing internal states. This study presents Priority Inversion via Operational Reasoning (PRIOR), a black-box, non-perturbative diagnostic framework that employs structurally biased but semantically neutral scenario cues to probe inference-level vulnerabilities without modifying pixel-level, statistical, or surface semantic properties. Given the limited accessibility of embodied vision-based systems, we evaluate PRIOR using large language models (LLMs) as abstract reasoning proxies to simulate cognitive prioritization in constrained textual surveillance scenarios inspired by Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) operations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Health Serv Res
September 2025
Department of Medical Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
Background: As part of a pragmatic cluster-randomized trial for patients with cancer, we recruited representatives from each care setting and trained them to be practice facilitators ("Symptom Sages"). This mixed methods study evaluated barriers and facilitators individuals encountered in this role.
Methods: Symptom Sages were invited to complete a brief web-based survey and semi-structured interview, developed using constructs from the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) 2.
Contemp Clin Trials
September 2025
School of Computer Science, University of Galway, Galway, Ireland.
Osteoporosis is a major bone disease, affecting more than 200 million people globally. Physical exercise is a powerful non-pharmaceutical fracture prevention strategy for people with osteoporosis or those at risk of falls. However, the participation in and adherence to an exercise regimen by older adults is often low due to a lack of motivation, a fear of falling, safety and/or cost.
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