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Decision-making preferences for intuition, deliberation, friends or crowds in independent and interdependent societies

  • Igor Grossmann*
  • , Maksim Rudnev
  • , Anna Dorfman
  • , Mohammad Atari
  • , Kelli Barr
  • , Abdellatif Bencherifa
  • , Wesley Buckwalter
  • , Rockwell F. Clancy
  • , German Cuji Dahua
  • , Norberto Cuji Dahua
  • , Yasuo Deguchi
  • , Ancon L. Wilmer
  • , Emanuele Fabiano
  • , Badr Guennoun
  • , Julia Halamová
  • , Takaaki Hashimoto
  • , Joshua Homan
  • , Martin Kanovský
  • , Kaori Karasawa
  • , Hackjin Kim
  • Jordan Kiper, Minha Lee, Xiaofei Liu, Veli Mitova, Rukmini Nair, Ljiljana Pantovic, Brian Porter, Pablo Quintanilla, Josien Reijer, Pedro P. Romero, Yuri Sato, Purnima Singh, Salma Tber, Daniel Wilkenfeld, Lixia Yi, Stephen Stich, H. Clark Barrett, Edouard Machery
*Corresponding author for this work
  • University of Waterloo
  • University of Johannesburg
  • Bar Ilan University
  • University of Massachusetts Amherst
  • University of Pittsburgh
  • International University of Rabat
  • George Mason University
  • Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
  • Kurintsa Community
  • Kyoto University
  • Universidad Antonio Ruiz de Montoya
  • University of Coimbra
  • University of Hassan II Casablanca
  • Institute of Applied Psychology
  • Toyo University
  • University of Kansas
  • Comenius University
  • University of Tokyo
  • Korea University
  • University of Alabama at Birmingham
  • Seoul National University
  • Wuhan University
  • Indian Institute of Technology Delhi
  • University of Belgrade
  • Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú
  • Ochanomizu University
  • Rutgers University–New Brunswick
  • University of California at Los Angeles

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

When multiple ways of deciding are laid out side-by-side, which does one favour? We conducted experiments in 12 countries (n = 3517 individuals; 13 languages; two Indigenous communities), with adults choosing among four decision strategies—personal intuition, private deliberation, friends’ advice or crowd wisdom—when working through six everyday dilemmas. In every society, self-reliant decisions (intuition or deliberation) were most commonly preferred and considered the wisest. Expectations for fellow citizens, however, were mixed: advice from friends was expected about as often as self-reliant routes. The self-reliance tilt was strongest in cultures and individuals high in independent self-construal and need for cognition, and weakest where interdependence and self-transcendent reflection were salient. The same patterns emerged when examining ratings of each strategy’s utility and oral protocols with Indigenous groups. Self-reliance appears the modal preference across cultures, but its strength is predictably tempered when cultures, and individuals within them, construe the self in relational rather than autonomous terms.

Original languageEnglish
Article number20251355
JournalProceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume292
Issue number2052
DOIs
StatePublished - 13 Aug 2025

Keywords

  • culture
  • decision-making
  • descriptive norms
  • folk theories
  • social norms
  • social orientation
  • wisdom

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