Back to Search Start Over

Beyond Procedure’s Content

Authors :
Greifeneder, Rainer
Müller, Patrick
Stahlberg, Dagmar
Van den Bos, Kees
Bless, Herbert
Source :
Experimental Psychology; May 2011, Vol. 58 Issue: 5 p341-352, 12p
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Procedural justice concerns play a critical role in economic settings, politics, and other domains of human life. Despite the vast evidence corroborating their relevance, considerably less is known about howprocedural justice judgments are formed. Whereas earlier theorizing focused on the systematic integration of content information, the present contribution provides a new perspective on the formation of justice judgments by examining the influence of accessibility experiences. Specifically, we hypothesize that procedural justice judgments may be formed based on the ease or difficulty with which justice-relevant information comes to mind. Three experiments corroborate this prediction in that procedures were evaluated less positively when the retrieval of associated unfair aspects was easy compared to difficult. Presumably this is because when it feels easy (difficult) to retrieve unfair aspects, these are perceived as frequent (infrequent), and hence the procedure as unjust (just). In addition to demonstrating that ease-of-retrieval may influence justice judgments, the studies further revealed that reliance on accessibility experiences is high in conditions of personal certainty. We suggest that this is because personal uncertainty fosters systematic processing of content information, whereas personal certainty may invite less taxing judgmental strategies such as reliance on ease-of-retrieval.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16183169 and 21905142
Volume :
58
Issue :
5
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Experimental Psychology
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs23224010
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1027/1618-3169/a000101