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Cheating Earlier In Relationship More Damaging

"First impressions matter when you want to build a lasting trust. If you get off on the wrong foot, the relationship may never be completely right again. It's easier to rebuild trust after a breach if you already have a strong relationship," said Robert Lount, co-author of the study and assistant professor of management and human resources at Ohio State University's Fisher College of Business.
The
study
opposes
the
popular
notion
that
many
great
relationships
start
off
on
a
bad
note.
"Our
results
fly
in
the
face
of
this
Hollywood
notion
of
hating
someone
at
first
sight
but
then
developing
a
wonderful,
passionate
relationship.
The
likelihood
of
that
happening
in
real
life
is
pretty
low," he
said.
Two
experiments
were
conducted
for
the
research,
the
participating
college
students
were
made
to
play
a
game
in
which
their
partners
violated
their
trust
either
right
at
the
beginning
of
the
game
or
sometime
later.
For
the
study,
the
popular
game
'prisoner's
dilemma'
was
used
to
observe
the
intensity
of
the
participant's
trust
after
it
was
broken.
The first set of the experiment had participants playing the computer game, thinking they were gaming against their partners in the other room, where as in fact it was pre-programmed to deceive the player at some vital points during the 30 rounds.
The end evaluations showed that the players betrayed at the beaning of the game held very shallow regards for their partners and were least co-operative during the final course of the games, showing lowered trust on their partners.
However, the results were quite opposite when the same evaluation were done for participants who were betrayed later part of the games. The computer defected the players in either of the cases at same number of times, but the timings varied.
"An immediate breach of trust is particularly difficult to overcome, and later breaches are considerably less harmful," said Lount
At the end of the experiment the participants were asked to attend a questionnaire. This revealed that the players who were betrayed at the beaning of the game rated their partners as less trustworthy than the others deceived later.
The second set of experiment was repeated in the same manner as the first one with 108 students, but the participants were asked to answer a shorter set of questions concerning their perceptions and feelings about their partner immediately following a deception and every 10 trials thereafter.
"Our results suggest that immediate breaches are especially costly because they seriously damage the impressions people have about their partner, and that's hard to repair," he said.
So, be careful about when and how you cheat your partner.



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