Revisiting REVISE: (Re)Testing unique and combined effects of REminding, VIsibility, and SElf-engagement manipulations on cheating behavior

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Standard

Revisiting REVISE : (Re)Testing unique and combined effects of REminding, VIsibility, and SElf-engagement manipulations on cheating behavior. / Schild, Christoph; Heck, Daniel W.; Scigala, Karolina Aleksandra; Zettler, Ingo.

I: Journal of Economic Psychology, Bind 75, Nr. Part A, 102161, 2019.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Schild, C, Heck, DW, Scigala, KA & Zettler, I 2019, 'Revisiting REVISE: (Re)Testing unique and combined effects of REminding, VIsibility, and SElf-engagement manipulations on cheating behavior', Journal of Economic Psychology, bind 75, nr. Part A, 102161. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joep.2019.04.001

APA

Schild, C., Heck, D. W., Scigala, K. A., & Zettler, I. (2019). Revisiting REVISE: (Re)Testing unique and combined effects of REminding, VIsibility, and SElf-engagement manipulations on cheating behavior. Journal of Economic Psychology, 75(Part A), [102161]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joep.2019.04.001

Vancouver

Schild C, Heck DW, Scigala KA, Zettler I. Revisiting REVISE: (Re)Testing unique and combined effects of REminding, VIsibility, and SElf-engagement manipulations on cheating behavior. Journal of Economic Psychology. 2019;75(Part A). 102161. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joep.2019.04.001

Author

Schild, Christoph ; Heck, Daniel W. ; Scigala, Karolina Aleksandra ; Zettler, Ingo. / Revisiting REVISE : (Re)Testing unique and combined effects of REminding, VIsibility, and SElf-engagement manipulations on cheating behavior. I: Journal of Economic Psychology. 2019 ; Bind 75, Nr. Part A.

Bibtex

@article{6abf1f6e1f01473898ae63e96b92211f,
title = "Revisiting REVISE: (Re)Testing unique and combined effects of REminding, VIsibility, and SElf-engagement manipulations on cheating behavior",
abstract = "Dishonest behavior poses a crucial threat to individuals and societies at large. To highlight situation factors that potentially reduce the occurrence and/or extent of dishonesty, Ayal, Gino, Barkan, and Ariely (2015) introduced the REVISE framework, consisting of three principles: REminding, VIsibility, and SElf-engagement. The evidence that the three REVISE principles actually reduce dishonesty is not always strong and sometimes even inconsistent, however. We herein thus conceptually replicate three suggested manipulations, each serving as an operationalization of one principle. In a large study with eight conditions and 5,039 participants, we link the REminding, VIsibility, and SElf-engagement manipulations to dishonesty, compare their effectiveness with each other, and test for potential interactions between them. Overall, we find that VIsibilty (in terms of overtly monitoring responses) and SElf-engagement (in terms of retyping an honesty statement) reduce dishonest behavior. We find no support for the effectiveness of REminding (in terms of ethical priming) or for any interaction between the REVISE principles. We also report two preregistered manipulation-check studies and discuss policy implications of our findings.",
keywords = "Cheating, Dishonesty, Honesty statement, Monitoring, Moral priming, Registered report, Replication, REVISE",
author = "Christoph Schild and Heck, {Daniel W.} and Scigala, {Karolina Aleksandra} and Ingo Zettler",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1016/j.joep.2019.04.001",
language = "English",
volume = "75",
journal = "Journal of Economic Psychology",
issn = "0167-4870",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "Part A",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Revisiting REVISE

T2 - (Re)Testing unique and combined effects of REminding, VIsibility, and SElf-engagement manipulations on cheating behavior

AU - Schild, Christoph

AU - Heck, Daniel W.

AU - Scigala, Karolina Aleksandra

AU - Zettler, Ingo

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Dishonest behavior poses a crucial threat to individuals and societies at large. To highlight situation factors that potentially reduce the occurrence and/or extent of dishonesty, Ayal, Gino, Barkan, and Ariely (2015) introduced the REVISE framework, consisting of three principles: REminding, VIsibility, and SElf-engagement. The evidence that the three REVISE principles actually reduce dishonesty is not always strong and sometimes even inconsistent, however. We herein thus conceptually replicate three suggested manipulations, each serving as an operationalization of one principle. In a large study with eight conditions and 5,039 participants, we link the REminding, VIsibility, and SElf-engagement manipulations to dishonesty, compare their effectiveness with each other, and test for potential interactions between them. Overall, we find that VIsibilty (in terms of overtly monitoring responses) and SElf-engagement (in terms of retyping an honesty statement) reduce dishonest behavior. We find no support for the effectiveness of REminding (in terms of ethical priming) or for any interaction between the REVISE principles. We also report two preregistered manipulation-check studies and discuss policy implications of our findings.

AB - Dishonest behavior poses a crucial threat to individuals and societies at large. To highlight situation factors that potentially reduce the occurrence and/or extent of dishonesty, Ayal, Gino, Barkan, and Ariely (2015) introduced the REVISE framework, consisting of three principles: REminding, VIsibility, and SElf-engagement. The evidence that the three REVISE principles actually reduce dishonesty is not always strong and sometimes even inconsistent, however. We herein thus conceptually replicate three suggested manipulations, each serving as an operationalization of one principle. In a large study with eight conditions and 5,039 participants, we link the REminding, VIsibility, and SElf-engagement manipulations to dishonesty, compare their effectiveness with each other, and test for potential interactions between them. Overall, we find that VIsibilty (in terms of overtly monitoring responses) and SElf-engagement (in terms of retyping an honesty statement) reduce dishonest behavior. We find no support for the effectiveness of REminding (in terms of ethical priming) or for any interaction between the REVISE principles. We also report two preregistered manipulation-check studies and discuss policy implications of our findings.

KW - Cheating

KW - Dishonesty

KW - Honesty statement

KW - Monitoring

KW - Moral priming

KW - Registered report

KW - Replication

KW - REVISE

U2 - 10.1016/j.joep.2019.04.001

DO - 10.1016/j.joep.2019.04.001

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85064312891

VL - 75

JO - Journal of Economic Psychology

JF - Journal of Economic Psychology

SN - 0167-4870

IS - Part A

M1 - 102161

ER -

ID: 221670539