Dear all, This is just a gentle reminder that today Akzira Abuova from Leipzig University will present her work on Collaborative dishonesty. The meeting will be online but you are all welcome to join me in the Psychology Common Room at 4pm. Collaborative Dishonesty: Children Cheat More When They Benefit Together Abstract: Collaboration, where individuals work together to achieve mutual benefits, is a defining feature of human societies. However, research has shown that adults are particularly willing to commit transgressions when pursuing collaborative goals. The developmental origins of this phenomenon, as well as its prevalence in non-Western populations remain largely unexplored. I will present a study conducted with the Kazakhstani population, examining how collaborative motives and socio-cultural influences can undermine honesty from an early stage of development. Additionally, I will briefly outline planned future studies. Best. Alex ________________________________ Scotland's University for Sporting Excellence The University of Stirling is a charity registered in Scotland, number SC 011159
Hello, Here is the link for the meeting ________________________________ From: Alejandro Sanchez Amaro <alejandro.sanchezamaro@stir.ac.uk> Sent: Wednesday, January 29, 2025 9:01 AM To: berg Mailing List <berg@lists.stir.ac.uk> Cc: Akzira Abuova <akzira_abuova@eva.mpg.de> Subject: [BERG] BERG meeting today Dear all, This is just a gentle reminder that today Akzira Abuova from Leipzig University will present her work on Collaborative dishonesty. The meeting will be online but you are all welcome to join me in the Psychology Common Room at 4pm. Collaborative Dishonesty: Children Cheat More When They Benefit Together Abstract: Collaboration, where individuals work together to achieve mutual benefits, is a defining feature of human societies. However, research has shown that adults are particularly willing to commit transgressions when pursuing collaborative goals. The developmental origins of this phenomenon, as well as its prevalence in non-Western populations remain largely unexplored. I will present a study conducted with the Kazakhstani population, examining how collaborative motives and socio-cultural influences can undermine honesty from an early stage of development. Additionally, I will briefly outline planned future studies. Best. Alex ________________________________ Scotland's University for Sporting Excellence The University of Stirling is a charity registered in Scotland, number SC 011159 ________________________________ Scotland's University for Sporting Excellence The University of Stirling is a charity registered in Scotland, number SC 011159
Dear all, Here is the link for the meeting https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_NTliODBlNDQtMzM1MC00O... Best, Alex ________________________________ From: Alejandro Sanchez Amaro <alejandro.sanchezamaro@stir.ac.uk> Sent: Wednesday, January 29, 2025 9:49 AM To: berg Mailing List <berg@lists.stir.ac.uk> Cc: Akzira Abuova <akzira_abuova@eva.mpg.de> Subject: Re: BERG meeting today Hello, Here is the link for the meeting ________________________________ From: Alejandro Sanchez Amaro <alejandro.sanchezamaro@stir.ac.uk> Sent: Wednesday, January 29, 2025 9:01 AM To: berg Mailing List <berg@lists.stir.ac.uk> Cc: Akzira Abuova <akzira_abuova@eva.mpg.de> Subject: [BERG] BERG meeting today Dear all, This is just a gentle reminder that today Akzira Abuova from Leipzig University will present her work on Collaborative dishonesty. The meeting will be online but you are all welcome to join me in the Psychology Common Room at 4pm. Collaborative Dishonesty: Children Cheat More When They Benefit Together Abstract: Collaboration, where individuals work together to achieve mutual benefits, is a defining feature of human societies. However, research has shown that adults are particularly willing to commit transgressions when pursuing collaborative goals. The developmental origins of this phenomenon, as well as its prevalence in non-Western populations remain largely unexplored. I will present a study conducted with the Kazakhstani population, examining how collaborative motives and socio-cultural influences can undermine honesty from an early stage of development. Additionally, I will briefly outline planned future studies. Best. Alex ________________________________ Scotland's University for Sporting Excellence The University of Stirling is a charity registered in Scotland, number SC 011159 ________________________________ Scotland's University for Sporting Excellence The University of Stirling is a charity registered in Scotland, number SC 011159
participants (1)
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Alejandro Sanchez Amaro