增强能力还是了解情况?通过谈判前的干预措施,努力缩小初次报价自信方面的性别差异

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS ACS Applied Bio Materials Pub Date : 2024-10-21 DOI:10.1016/j.joep.2024.102775
Erna Kokić , Laure Wagner , Ana García López del Amo , Charlotte L. Giering , Van Ly Truong , Hannes M. Petrowsky , Onno M. Husen , David D. Loschelder
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引用次数: 0

摘要

谈判行为中的性别差异--例如,男性与女性提出(自信的)首次报价的可能性--导致了全球普遍存在的性别薪酬差距(GPG)。为了缓解这种性别差异带来的社会和经济后果,我们首先在一项试点研究(N = 203)中对两种谈判前信息干预措施进行了实证验证。在主要的实验干预研究中(N = 585),男性和女性参与者随机接受以下信息:(1)关于 GPG 的信息,或(2)针对不同性别的赋权信息,或(3)对照条件下的无信息。在随后关于新工作起薪的谈判任务中,我们评估了参与者的(a)首次主动报价的可能性和(b)首次报价的自信心。结果显示,行为上的性别差异非常明显:在所有条件下,男性更有可能提出第一份报价(d = 0.178),而且更自信(d = 0.339)。重要的是,与控制条件相比,谈判前的信息干预(dinform = 0.304)和授权干预(dempower = 0.255)提高了女性的首次报价自信度。然而,男性也获得了类似的干预益处(dinform = 0.259;dempower = 0.284),总体而言,性别差异非常明显。为了探索这种性别差异的根本原因,我们测试了四种相互竞争的心理机制(即自尊、积极和消极情绪、GPG 意识和自我效能)。我们的结果凸显了即使是短期、最低限度的干预也能对谈判行为中的性别差异产生影响,并说明了哪些心理机制首先解释了性别差异的出现。
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Empowered or informed? Seeking to mitigate gender differences in first-offer assertiveness through pre-negotiation interventions
Gender differences in negotiation behavior—for instance, men’s vs. women’s likelihood to make (assertive) first offers—contribute to the globally prevalent gender pay gap (GPG). In an attempt to mitigate the social and economic consequences of this gender disparity, we first empirically validated two pre-negotiation message interventions in a pilot study (N = 203). In the main experimental intervention study (N = 585), male versus female participants randomly received this (1) informative message about the GPG, or (2) gender-specific empowering message, or (3) no message in the control condition. In a subsequent negotiation task on the starting salary for a new job, we assessed participants’ (a) likelihood-to-initiate a first offer and (b) first-offer assertiveness. Results showed a remarkably robust behavioral gender disparity: across all conditions, men were more likely to make the first offer (d = 0.178) and made them more assertively (d = 0.339). Importantly, compared to the control condition, the informative (dinform = 0.304) and the empowering (dempower = 0.255) pre-negotiation interventions increased women’s first-offer assertiveness. Similar intervention benefits emerged for men (dinform = 0.259; dempower = 0.284), however, yielding an overall remarkably robust gender difference. To explore the underlying reasons for this gender disparity, we tested four competing psychological mechanisms (i.e., self-esteem, positive and negative affect, GPG awareness, and self-efficacy). Our results highlight the impact that even short, minimal interventions can have on gender differences in negotiation behavior and illustrate which psychological mechanisms explain the emergence of gender disparity in the first place.
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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