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  1. Highlighting concerns about honor and reputation (what the authors termed “virility”) significantly dampened people’s willingness to apologize. Gelfand and her team theorized that shifting participants’ perspectives on honor might reverse this trend. “Honor is about both virility and virtue, or moral integrity,” Gelfand says.

  2. Taken together, results from the two experiments suggest that highlighting honor reduces people’s willingness to apologize. However, reframing honor as acting with moral integrity leads people to consider apology more positively and to become more willing to apologize, which may offer a remedy to reduce conflicts when honor is at stake.

  3. People in honor cultures may also be less willing to apologize because they perceive apology to be ineffective. ... However, the social motivation literature concerning willingness to apologize ...

  4. Mar 8, 2018 · Leunissen J. M., De Cremer D., Reinders Folmer C. P., van Dijke M. (2013). The apology mismatch: Asymmetries between victim’s need for apologies and perpetrator’s willingness to apologize. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 49, 315–324.

    • Karina Schumann
    • 2018
  5. Nov 30, 2022 · (The researchers had participants self-report their political parties, and find that Republicans were much less supportive of an apology than Democrats.) This collection of studies tells us that “people’s willingness to apologize first often depends on what they think the other person is going to do,” Chaudhry says.

  6. Oct 3, 2022 · relationship between honor values and willingness to apologize in transgression scenarios ( ab [indirect effect] = 0.07, SE = 0.02, 95% CI = [ 0.12, 0.04]) and general proclivity to

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  8. may have different implications for the willingness to apologize. While apologizing can pose a threat to honor by bringing repu- tational concerns to mind, apologizing may be seen as a vehicle

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