Cultural Perspective Taking in Cross-Cultural Negotiation

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This study introduces the construct cultural perspective taking in negotiation, the active consideration of the other party's culturally-normative negotiation behaviors prior to negotiation, and compares the effect of cultural perspective taking (CPT) versus alternative-focused perspective taking (PT) in cross-cultural negotiations. 160 undergraduate students of North American and East Asian ethnicity in the United States and Canada participated in a simulated cross-cultural buyer-seller negotiation in a laboratory study. Participants were randomly assigned to CPT or PT condition. Results show that negotiators who engaged in CPT claimed more value than those who engaged in PT. And when both East Asian and North American negotiators engaged in CPT, East Asian negotiators claimed more value. CPT had no effect on value creation. This study highlights that learning about the other culture before a cross-cultural encounter benefits value claiming, but not necessarily value creation.
Publisher
SPRINGER
Issue Date
2013-05
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Keywords

UNITED-STATES; SOCIAL-INTERACTION; CONFLICT; SELF; JUDGMENT; BEHAVIOR

Citation

GROUP DECISION AND NEGOTIATION, v.22, no.3, pp.389 - 405

ISSN
0926-2644
DOI
10.1007/s10726-011-9272-4
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/173776
Appears in Collection
MG-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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