Competition in human groups Impact on group cohesion, perceived stress and outcome satisfaction
2015 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.
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- Authors
- Boos, Margarete ; Franiel, Xaver; Belz, Michael
- Abstract
- This study on competition in human groups was performed within the context of the competitive outcome interdependence concept: the degree to which personal outcomes among group members are affected by the consequences of task performance of others, e.g. when one group member gains a high reward for a task, this lowers the available reward for other group members. Our computer-based multi-participant game empirically assessed how competitive versus neutral conditions influenced the reward-maximising behaviour of 200 undergraduate students functioning in ten-person groups - each playing two games (1 neutral and 1 competitive), their perceived pay satisfaction as well as perceived stress levels and sense of calmness within the games' task to search for coins. Participants were represented by black dots moving on a virtual playground. Results showed that competition led to reward-maximising but fellow group member disadvantaging behaviour, and all participants experienced lower pay satisfaction, higher stress levels and less calmness. We conclude that short-term behavioural consequences of positive individual competitive behaviour were gained at the above-mentioned potential long-term negative costs for all group members. This implies group paradigms aimed at sustainability should avoid introducing competitive factors that at best result in short-lived gains and at worst cause widespread dissatisfaction, stress and a pervasive lack of calmness. (C) 2015 Published by Elsevier B.V.
- Issue Date
- 2015
- Journal
- Behavioural Processes
- ISSN
- 1872-8308
- eISSN
- 0376-6357
- Language
- English