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Featured researches published by Simon Columbus.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

In-group defense, out-group aggression, and coordination failures in intergroup conflict

Carsten K. W. De Dreu; Jörg Gross; Zsombor Z. Méder; Michael Rojek Giffin; Eliska Prochazkova; Jonathan Krikeb; Simon Columbus

Significance Across a range of domains, from group-hunting predators to laboratory groups, companies, and nation states, we find that out-group aggression is less successful because it is more difficult to coordinate than in-group defense. This finding explains why appeals for defending the in-group may be more persuasive than appeals to aggress a rivaling out-group and suggests that (third) parties seeking to regulate intergroup conflict should, in addition to reducing willingness to contribute to one’s group’s fighting capacity, undermine arrangements for coordinating out-group aggression, such as leadership, communication, and infrastructure. Intergroup conflict persists when and because individuals make costly contributions to their group’s fighting capacity, but how groups organize contributions into effective collective action remains poorly understood. Here we distinguish between contributions aimed at subordinating out-groups (out-group aggression) from those aimed at defending the in-group against possible out-group aggression (in-group defense). We conducted two experiments in which three-person aggressor groups confronted three-person defender groups in a multiround contest game (n = 276; 92 aggressor–defender contests). Individuals received an endowment from which they could contribute to their group’s fighting capacity. Contributions were always wasted, but when the aggressor group’s fighting capacity exceeded that of the defender group, the aggressor group acquired the defender group’s remaining resources (otherwise, individuals on both sides were left with the remainders of their endowment). In-group defense appeared stronger and better coordinated than out-group aggression, and defender groups survived roughly 70% of the attacks. This low success rate for aggressor groups mirrored that of group-hunting predators such as wolves and chimpanzees (n = 1,382 cases), hostile takeovers in industry (n = 1,637 cases), and interstate conflicts (n = 2,586). Furthermore, whereas peer punishment increased out-group aggression more than in-group defense without affecting success rates (Exp. 1), sequential (vs. simultaneous) decision-making increased coordination of collective action for out-group aggression, doubling the aggressor’s success rate (Exp. 2). The relatively high success rate of in-group defense suggests evolutionary and cultural pressures may have favored capacities for cooperation and coordination when the group goal is to defend, rather than to expand, dominate, and exploit.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2017

How do people think about interdependence? A multidimensional model of subjective outcome interdependence.

Fabiola H. Gerpott; Daniel Balliet; Simon Columbus; Catherine Molho; Reinout E. de Vries

Interdependence is a fundamental characteristic of social interactions. Interdependence Theory states that 6 dimensions describe differences between social situations. Here we examine if these 6 dimensions describe how people think about their interdependence with others in a situation. We find that people (in situ and ex situ) can reliably differentiate situations according to 5, but not 6, dimensions of interdependence: (a) mutual dependence, (b) power, (c) conflict, (d) future interdependence, and (e) information certainty. This model offers a unique framework for understanding how people think about social situations compared to another recent model of situation construal (DIAMONDS). Furthermore, we examine factors that are theorized to shape perceptions of interdependence, such as situational cues (e.g., nonverbal behavior) and personality (e.g., HEXACO and Social Value Orientation). We also study the implications of subjective interdependence for emotions and cooperative behavior during social interactions. This model of subjective interdependence explains substantial variation in the emotions people experience in situations (i.e., happiness, sadness, anger, and disgust), and explains 24% of the variance in cooperation, above and beyond the DIAMONDS model. Throughout these studies, we develop and validate a multidimensional measure of subjective outcome interdependence that can be used in diverse situations and relationships—the Situational Interdependence Scale (SIS). We discuss how this model of interdependence can be used to better understand how people think about social situations encountered in close relationships, organizations, and society.


Ecquid Novi | 2014

Reconnoitering the role of citizen journalism ethics in the emerging networked public sphere

Bruce Mutsvairo; Simon Columbus; Iris Leijendekker

Abstract Citizen journalism is emerging as a powerful phenomenon across Africa. The rise of digitally networked technologies is reshaping reporting across the continent. This change is technological (with social media platforms enabling new forms of publishing, receiving and discussing stories) as well as cultural, with idiosyncratic conventions emerging on these platforms. This study surveys the ethical beliefs of citizen journalists in several sub-Saharan African countries. The research showed that they are driven by a sense of social responsibility and a wish to inform their readers and the general public. Citizen journalists show a clear anti-authoritarian strain and an antipathy towards government regulation, yet most see themselves as subject to the same ethics that guide traditional journalism.


Central European journal of communication | 2012

Emerging patterns and trends in citizen journalism in Africa: The case of Zimbabwe

Bruce Mutsvairo; Simon Columbus


Archive | 2012

African Citizen Journalists Ethics and the Emerging Networked Public Sphere

Bruce Mutsvairo; Simon Columbus; Iris Leijendekker


Disruptive Technologies Innovation and Global Redesign: Emerging Implications | 2012

Is the Mobile Phone a Disruptive Technology? A Partial Review of Evidence from Developing Countries

Simon Columbus


PsycTESTS Dataset | 2018

Situational Interdependence Scale

Fabiola H. Gerpott; Daniel Balliet; Simon Columbus; Catherine Molho; Reinout E. de Vries


Archive | 2017

Situational Interdependence Scale - Data and Research Material

Fabiola H. Gerpott; Daniel Balliet; Reinout E. de Vries; Simon Columbus; Catherine Molho


Archive | 2017

Playing a Different Game: Perceived Interdependence as a Mechanism Underlying Framing Effects on Cooperation in Social Dilemmas

Simon Columbus; Fabiola H. Gerpott; Jiří Münich


Archive | 2015

Leadership in Altruistic Punishment and Reward

Simon Columbus

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