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%T Strategic thinking in the shadow of self‐enhancement: Benefits and costs
%A Grüning, David J.
%A Krueger, Joachim I.
%J British Journal of Social Psychology
%N 4
%P 1725-1742
%V 63
%D 2024
%K hide‐and‐seek game; randomization; self‐enhancement; strategic reasoning; theory of mind
%@ 2044-8309
%~ GESIS
%U localfile:/var/local/dda-files/prod/crawlerfiles/f77f080091184dfa8a9691ab2f33c7ce/f77f080091184dfa8a9691ab2f33c7ce.pdf
%X Using a variant of the hide‐and‐seek game, we show in three studies that self‐enhancement can help or hinder strategic thinking. In this guessing game, one player chooses a number while another player tries to guess it. Each player does this either in a random fashion (throwing a mental die) or by active thinking. The structure of the game implies that guessers benefit from thinking about a number, whereas choosers are disadvantaged. Yet, regardless of their role, respondents prefer to actively think about a number. For choosers, the belief they can outthink the opponent amounts to self‐enhancement, whereas for guessers, the same belief can be rationally justified. We discuss the implications of the findings for theories of strategic cognition and applications to real‐world contexts.
%C GBR
%G en
%9 Zeitschriftenartikel
%W GESIS - http://www.gesis.org
%~ SSOAR - http://www.ssoar.info