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Comparative Study
. 2020 Feb:78:102865.
doi: 10.1016/j.concog.2019.102865. Epub 2020 Jan 7.

The relationship between endowment and ownership effects in memory across cultures

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Comparative Study

The relationship between endowment and ownership effects in memory across cultures

Philip Collard et al. Conscious Cogn. 2020 Feb.

Abstract

An object one owns is typically more highly valued than an equivalent object owned by another person. This endowment effect has been attributed to the aversion of loss of one's possessions (through selling), or the added value of an item due to self-association (through owning). To date, investigation of these mechanisms has been hampered by the between-subjects methodology traditionally employed to measure endowment. Over two experiments, we report a novel within-subjects method for measuring an endowment bias. In these studies, Western participants showed enhanced valuation of owned items, whereas East-Asian participants did not. This endowment bias also correlated with the ownership effect in memory (a measure of self-referential processing) in Western, but not East-Asian participants. Our results suggest that the endowment effect is partly predicated on the same factors that influence the ownership effect and that this commonality is likely linked to conceptions of ownership specifically, and self-concept more generally.

Keywords: Culture; Endowment effect; Ownership; Self-construal.

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