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Primacy effects in justice judgments: Testing predictions from
fairness heuristic theory
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- Lind, A.E., Kray, L., and Thompson, L. (in press).
Primacy effects in justice judgments: Testing predictions from
fairness heuristic theory. Organization Behavior & Human Decision
Processes.
Abstract
We tested predictions from fairness heuristic theory that
justice judgments are more sensitive to early fairness-relevant
information than to later fairness-relevant information and that
this primacy effect is more evident when group identification is
higher. Participants
working on a series of three tasks experienced resource failures
that interfered with their productivity. In a manipulation of fairness-relevant experiences, a
supervisor denied the participant the opportunity to explain his
or her problems on the first, second, or third of three work
trials (but participants were given an opportunity to explain on
the other two trials), or the supervisor never denied the
participant the opportunity to explain.
Prior to the work periods, the participants either had or
had not undergone a manipulation designed to induce greater
identification with the work group.
As predicted, there was a primacy effect on fairness
judgments and acceptance of authority in the high identification
conditions and no evidence of such an effect in the low
identification conditions. The
implications of the findings for understanding the psychology of
justice and for real-world justice phenomena are discussed.
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