Degree of group consensus shapes perceived power structures and decision-process evaluations of groups

Tianyi Li, Jeffrey R. Parker, J. Clarkson
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Abstract

Groups often make decisions by consensus and choose the option(s) preferred by the majority. Most research has therefore treated group consensus as a singular construct, contrasting consensus and dissensus, or the majority and minority. The current research, however, found that varying degrees of consensus among the majority impacted outside observers’ perceptions of the voting group’s internal power structure and evaluations of its decision-making process. Specifically, partial consent (not all members agree), versus unanimous consent (all members agree), led observers to (i) infer that the group had a more decentralized, egalitarian (vs centralized, hierarchical) power structure and, consequently (ii) evaluated the group’s ostensible decision-making process more (vs less) favorably. In sum, this research demonstrated how a lack of unanimity can bolster group perceptions, identified one context where that effect was attenuated by making unanimity favorable, discusses the role of procedural fairness in group judgments, and reveals potential implications for public affairs.
群体共识的程度塑造了群体的感知权力结构和决策过程评估
群体通常通过共识做出决策,并选择大多数人喜欢的选项。因此,大多数研究都将群体共识视为一种单一的结构,将共识和异议,或多数和少数进行对比。然而,目前的研究发现,多数人之间不同程度的共识影响了外部观察者对投票集团内部权力结构的看法和对其决策过程的评估。具体来说,部分同意(不是所有成员都同意)与一致同意(所有成员都同意),导致观察者(i)推断该群体有一个更分散、更平等(而不是集中、分层)的权力结构,因此(ii)对该群体表面上的决策过程的评价更多(而不是更少)有利。总而言之,本研究证明了缺乏一致意见是如何增强群体观念的,确定了一个通过一致意见的有利条件来减弱这种影响的环境,讨论了程序公平在群体判断中的作用,并揭示了对公共事务的潜在影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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