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D.M.GIMARA Madhushani
TC/is/2011/ms/13
Trincomalee Campus Eatern University
Sri Lanka
 . Introduction
 definition of negotiation
 Measures of negotiation behavior
 Economic measures
 Social-psychological measures
 Theoretical approaches and models
 Individual differences
 Motivational
 cognitive models
 conclusions
Negotiation is a pervasive and important form of social interaction.
Negotiation occurs:
in business
academic environments
in informal social interactions.
Negotiation
The fundamental and enduring questions raised
by the growing body of research on negotiation
behavior include the:
What factors lead to negotiation success or
failure?
Which theoretical perspective provides the
best account of negotiation behavior?
What empirical findings must a theoretical
approach to negotiation explain?
Normative approach
-on axioms of individual rationality
-prescribe how people should behave in competitive situations
Descriptive approach
examine:
-the influence of individual characteristics
-motivations
-cognitive processes on judgment
-Behavior
-Outcomes in negotiation
Negotiation is the process whereby people
attempt to settle what each shall give and take
or perform and receive in a transaction between
them.
-(Rubin & Brown, 1975)-
People believe that they have conflicting
interests
Communication is possible
Intermediate solutions or compromises are
possible
Parties may make provisional offers and
counteroffers
Offers and proposals do not determine
outcomes until they are accepted by both
parties.
the negotiating parties
their interests
the negotiation process
the negotiation outcome
The structure of the
bargaining situation is
determined by the degree
of conflict between
parties' interests.
Pure conflict situations are
known as
fixed-sum or purely
distributive negotiations.
Sometimes parties' interests are neither
completely opposed nor purely
compatible. Such situations are known
as variable-sum or integrative
negotiations.
Behavioral enactments of bargaining strategies.
communication between bargainers
Interaction that
occurs between
parties before
the outcome.
The negotiation outcome is the product
of the bargaining situation.
Negotiations may end in impasse or in
mutual agreement. A negotiation
outcome is said to be efficient or
pareto optimal: does not exist some
other feasible solution or set of
solutions that would improve the
utility of one or both parties while not
hurting either party
Economic measures
Social psychological measures
Focus on the outcomes or products of the negotiation
Derived from axioms of individual rationality
Normative analyses of negotiation behavior
Mutual Agreement
Creating Resources: Integrative Bargaining
Claiming Resources: Distributive Bargaining
Negotiators should reach a
mutual agreement if the
alternative is worse than what
they could achieve through
agreement with the other
party.
Negotiators should reach an
agreement with the other
party if it is in both their
interests to do so.
The utility of a mutual
agreement is determined by
the zone of agreement
defined by negotiators'
reservation prices.
Positive
bargaining
Zone
Buyer Seller
Initialoffer
TargetPoint
WalkawayPoint
TargetPoint
AskingPrice
Creating Resources: Integrative Bargaining
negotiators' interests are not purely competitive,
negotiation involves not just dividing resources
(distributive bargaining) but identifying additional
value, benefits, and resources (integrative
bargaining).
The economic definition of integrative bargaining is
precise and refers to whether negotiated outcomes are
efficient, or pareto optimal.
Thompson and Hastie
(in press) noted that
negotiators may reach
integrative agreements
by identifying
compatible issues.
Compatible issues are
issues for which
negotiators have similar
preferences.
Claiming resources: distributive
bargaining
The distributive component reflects the primary
motivation of negotiators: to maximize their utility.
A fundamental task for the negotiator is to divide
resources in such a manner that he or she keeps most
of the bargaining surplus.
The bargaining surplus is the difference between
one's reservation price and the final settlement.
Social-psychological measures of negotiation performance
are based on concepts of social perception.
The elements of social perception include most aspects of
perceivers' social worlds: people, their behaviors, and
contexts or situations.
The most important elements of social perception in
negotiation are:
 negotiators' perceptions of the bargaining situation
 the other party or bargaining opponent
 themselves
People actively perceive
their social world by :
selecting
categorizing
interpreting
inferring
information
For example: Negotiators do not know what the interests of
the other party are but instead make inferences
about their opponent:
The perception process is constructive and selective.
perception is influenced by the salience of information
and the in which information is presented, as well as
by perceivers' expectations, knowledge, and experience.
people's perceptions influence their behavior.
Perceptions of the Negotiation Situation
Judgments that people make about the bargaining
process and outcome
Examples:
Negotiators' judgments of the fairness of
the procedures
outcomes of negotiation and
expectations and perceived norms
concerning appropriate behavior
• influenced by:
 their implicit theories of
bargaining
 Conflict
Negotiation
Also include their views of the
structure of the bargaining task:
purely competitive
cooperative
integrative
Pinkley noted that negotiators' perceptions of
conflict are multidimensional and may be
characterized by three bipolar dimensions, or
"conflict frames":
relationship-task
emotional-intellectual
 compromise-win
Perceptions of the Other Party
Include:
 many of the processes and elements
associated with the more general
process of person perception and
impression formation.
An important and powerful aspect of
person perception is evaluation or liking
Trait inferences that negotiators make about
the other party's
 intelligence
 sociability
 expertise
 skill
 ability
 cooperativeness
competitiveness.
the attributions that negotiators make to explain the
behavior of their bargaining opponent
the predictions they make about the opponent's
future behavior
Perceptions of the other party are hypothesized
Perceptions of the Self
Include:
 many of the dimensions relevant to
perceptions of the bargaining opponent,
such as skill, cooperativeness, fairness.
negotiators' judgments of their own
interests, values, goals, and risk preferences
social comparisons between the self and the
other party
The hypothesized mental structures used to represent self-
perceptions are self-schemata
Individual differences
Motivational
Cognitive models
Individual Differences Approach
Identify stable characteristics of people that
reliably affect their bargaining behavior and
performance.
Collection of disparate hypotheses, predictions, and
low-level theoretical statements
General classes of theoretical models characterize
the individual difference approach:
Direct-effect models
Contingency models
Direct-effect models
• Individual differences directly influence social behavior.
e.g.:
The hypothesis that women perceive conflict
differently than do men.
Individual differences in the negotiation literature
include:
 relationship orientation (Machiavellianism;
cooperative-competitive orientation)
 cognitive ability (cognitive complexity;
perspective-taking ability)
 gender/ sex role orientation
Contingency Model
negotiation behavior is determined by:
 specific characteristics of persons
particular features of the situation
e.g.:
Machiavellian bargainer will take advantage of
a non-Machiavellian bargaining opponent
when the interaction occurs face to face, but
not when a barrier obstructs their visual
contact.
The impact of individual differences on
economic and social-psychological
measures of performance
Economic Criteria
Mutual Agreement
Fry (1985) proposed a contingency model
relationship between negotiator
Machiavellianism and visual accessibility.
 low- high pairs negotiating face to face would
be most likely to fail to reach agreement
Joint Outcomes
Cognitive ability, Integrative bargaining
situations often require problem-solving
behaviors to maximize joint gain.
cognitively complex negotiators entertain more
alternative conceptions of bargaining situations
and gather and integrate more information
during bargaining.
 Gender:
• Other researchers have hypothesized that the sex
composition of the dyad may affect integrative
bargaining outcomes.
e.g.:
Men seek to maximize their own gains,
whereas women respond to the
interpersonal aspect of the situation.
However, there was no support for this
prediction.
Individual Outcomes
Machiavellianism, In general, Machiavellian
bargainers claim more resources than do non-
Machiavellian bargainers .
Trait Machiavellianism may not directly influence
negotiation behavior but may instead interact
with situational and task constraints to influence
performance.
 Cognitive ability, increase negotiators' ability
to claim resources
Negotiators with high perspective-taking
ability earned higher outcomes than did those
with low perspective-taking ability.
Social-Psychological Measures
.
Investigators of individual differences on social-psychological
measures have primarily explored the direct effects of gender
and sex role orientation on perceptions.
Perceptions of the Bargaining Situation
 Men are more or less effective negotiators than are women, men
may perceive conflict differently than do women. In general,
men are more concerned with winning and maximizing their
outcomes, whereas women are more concerned with maintaining
the relationship.
For example:
Pinkley found that women were more
likely than men to interpret a conflict
situation in relationship terms, whereas
men were more concerned with the
exchange of resources.
Perceptions of the Opponent
.
Women tend to perceive their opponents as
similar to themselves, whereas men perceive
themselves as fundamentally different from their
opponents
Perceptions of the Self
Women engage in more self-derogation
during negotiation than do men. Men
perceive themselves as more powerful than
do women
. Motivational Approaches
 Examine the influence of aspirations and goals on
bargaining behavior and outcomes.
 Two general theoretical approaches have developed
within this broad area.
1.aspiration is a continuous, unidimensional
concept ranging from low to high .
2.bargaining goals are not unidimensional and
that the maximization of gain is not the
primary goal of bargaining
The impact of individual differences on
economic and social-psychological measures of
performance
Economic Criteria
Mutual Agreement
 A key prediction of aspiration-level models is that high
aspirations block opportunities for mutual agreement
and increase the likelihood of an impasse.
Two separate lines of evidence support this prediction:
 studies of constituency pressure
 explicit goal setting
Constituency pressure, negotiators who
represent a larger group or constituency feel
accountable to their constituency and
pressured to meet their goals and,
consequently, adopt higher aspiration levels
and remain firmer in their aspirations than do
negotiators who are not under constituency
pressure.
Explicit goal setting, manipulate negotiators'
aspirations by providing them with a specific
goal or target value to achieve.
Most of this research has been conducted
using the experimental bargaining market
paradigm .
Specific, challenging, or demanding goals
complete fewer successful transactions than
do those not given challenging goals.
High aspirations have more unsuccessful
transactions than do negotiators with lower
aspirations.
Dual Concern Model
suggests that the relationship between
aspiration and bargaining outcomes is more
complex and requires consideration of
negotiators' concern for the other party in
addition to their own level of aspiration.
integrative out- comes are reached through
joint problem-solving.
Joint Outcomes
Explicit goal setting is derived from aspiration-
level theories. In general, higher aspirations are
predicted to lead to greater joint profit.
Individual Outcomes
Aspirations also improve distributive
bargaining behavior. Bargainers who have
specific, explicit goals achieve higher
individual outcomes than do bargainers not
given explicit goals to achieve.
Social Psychological Measures
constituency pressure view bargaining
situations as more competitive and less
productive than do bargainers who do not
represent a constituency or at least do not feel
pressured to maximize profits for a
constituency.
Perceptions of the Other Party
 Negotiators under pressure from their
constituencies to maximize gains perceived
themselves as more dissimilar to their
opponents than did negotiators who were
not under pressure to maximize gains.
Cognitive Approach
The basis of the cognitive approach is information-processing
theory.
Information is typically represented as ,
A list of features
 concepts are represented as nodes labeled with a word
or a phrase,
 Relations between idea nodes are symbolized
theoretically as links in a network.
Economic Criteria
Mutual Agreement
Two factors affect risk aversion:
The framing of negotiation payoffs
Negotiators' judgments of the probability that
their offer would be selected by a neutral
third party under final offer arbitration.
Joint Outcomes
Framing of negotiation payoffs
a positive frame (who view negotiation in terms
of maximizing gain) should be risk averse,
whereas those with a negative frame (who view
negotiation in terms of minimizing loss) should
be risk seeking.
Judgment accuracy
Misperceptions of the other party are a
primary cause of suboptimal outcomes in
negotiation.
Two critical judgments that negotiators make
about the other party's interests:
compatibility judgments
determine whether all or only some of their
interests are incompatible with those of the other
party.
 Priority judgments
negotiators' perceptions of the other party's
evaluation of the relative importance of the to-
be-negotiated issues.
Social Psychological Criteria
Perceptions of the Bargaining Situation
Negotiators bring a fixed-pie, or win-lose
perception to negotiation.
Perceptions of the Opponent
Negotiators tend to perceive the other party
as completely dissimilar to themselves.
Perceptions of the Self
Self-serving evaluations, Negotiators make
self-serving attributions and evaluations in
bargaining.
Example,
negotiators who are unable to reach mutually
acceptable agreements blame their opponent
for the failure, whereas they usually attribute
success to themselves.
conclusion
Theoretical Issues
Theoretical approaches are necessarily
contradictory.
The theory should be accessible to objective,
economic analysis;
Explain the perceptual experience of
negotiators and their judgment processes.
A theory should explain the relationships
between judgment and behavior in
negotiation
In addition to explaining the correspondences
between judgment and behavior, the theory
should explain discrepancies.
Motivation and goals are essential ingredients
in a theory of negotiation
Empirical Issues
Economic measures of performance have been
used more extensively than social-psychological
measures.
Why it is important to include both measures in
research programs:
 negotiators typically do not have the
information necessary to make objective judgments
of the bargaining situation; their understanding of
the bargaining situation is based on their
perceptions.
It is useful to compare negotiators'
perceptions with objective measures
Negotiators' perceptions are important to
examine because they influence behavior in
negotiation.
Negotiation

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Negotiation

  • 2.  . Introduction  definition of negotiation  Measures of negotiation behavior  Economic measures  Social-psychological measures  Theoretical approaches and models  Individual differences  Motivational  cognitive models  conclusions
  • 3. Negotiation is a pervasive and important form of social interaction. Negotiation occurs: in business academic environments in informal social interactions.
  • 5. The fundamental and enduring questions raised by the growing body of research on negotiation behavior include the: What factors lead to negotiation success or failure? Which theoretical perspective provides the best account of negotiation behavior? What empirical findings must a theoretical approach to negotiation explain?
  • 6. Normative approach -on axioms of individual rationality -prescribe how people should behave in competitive situations Descriptive approach examine: -the influence of individual characteristics -motivations -cognitive processes on judgment -Behavior -Outcomes in negotiation
  • 7. Negotiation is the process whereby people attempt to settle what each shall give and take or perform and receive in a transaction between them. -(Rubin & Brown, 1975)-
  • 8. People believe that they have conflicting interests Communication is possible Intermediate solutions or compromises are possible Parties may make provisional offers and counteroffers Offers and proposals do not determine outcomes until they are accepted by both parties.
  • 9. the negotiating parties their interests the negotiation process the negotiation outcome
  • 10. The structure of the bargaining situation is determined by the degree of conflict between parties' interests. Pure conflict situations are known as fixed-sum or purely distributive negotiations. Sometimes parties' interests are neither completely opposed nor purely compatible. Such situations are known as variable-sum or integrative negotiations.
  • 11. Behavioral enactments of bargaining strategies. communication between bargainers Interaction that occurs between parties before the outcome. The negotiation outcome is the product of the bargaining situation. Negotiations may end in impasse or in mutual agreement. A negotiation outcome is said to be efficient or pareto optimal: does not exist some other feasible solution or set of solutions that would improve the utility of one or both parties while not hurting either party
  • 13. Focus on the outcomes or products of the negotiation Derived from axioms of individual rationality Normative analyses of negotiation behavior Mutual Agreement Creating Resources: Integrative Bargaining Claiming Resources: Distributive Bargaining
  • 14. Negotiators should reach a mutual agreement if the alternative is worse than what they could achieve through agreement with the other party. Negotiators should reach an agreement with the other party if it is in both their interests to do so. The utility of a mutual agreement is determined by the zone of agreement defined by negotiators' reservation prices.
  • 16. Creating Resources: Integrative Bargaining negotiators' interests are not purely competitive, negotiation involves not just dividing resources (distributive bargaining) but identifying additional value, benefits, and resources (integrative bargaining). The economic definition of integrative bargaining is precise and refers to whether negotiated outcomes are efficient, or pareto optimal.
  • 17. Thompson and Hastie (in press) noted that negotiators may reach integrative agreements by identifying compatible issues. Compatible issues are issues for which negotiators have similar preferences.
  • 18. Claiming resources: distributive bargaining The distributive component reflects the primary motivation of negotiators: to maximize their utility. A fundamental task for the negotiator is to divide resources in such a manner that he or she keeps most of the bargaining surplus. The bargaining surplus is the difference between one's reservation price and the final settlement.
  • 19. Social-psychological measures of negotiation performance are based on concepts of social perception. The elements of social perception include most aspects of perceivers' social worlds: people, their behaviors, and contexts or situations. The most important elements of social perception in negotiation are:  negotiators' perceptions of the bargaining situation  the other party or bargaining opponent  themselves
  • 20. People actively perceive their social world by : selecting categorizing interpreting inferring information For example: Negotiators do not know what the interests of the other party are but instead make inferences about their opponent: The perception process is constructive and selective. perception is influenced by the salience of information and the in which information is presented, as well as by perceivers' expectations, knowledge, and experience. people's perceptions influence their behavior.
  • 21. Perceptions of the Negotiation Situation Judgments that people make about the bargaining process and outcome Examples: Negotiators' judgments of the fairness of the procedures outcomes of negotiation and expectations and perceived norms concerning appropriate behavior
  • 22. • influenced by:  their implicit theories of bargaining  Conflict Negotiation Also include their views of the structure of the bargaining task: purely competitive cooperative integrative
  • 23. Pinkley noted that negotiators' perceptions of conflict are multidimensional and may be characterized by three bipolar dimensions, or "conflict frames": relationship-task emotional-intellectual  compromise-win
  • 24. Perceptions of the Other Party Include:  many of the processes and elements associated with the more general process of person perception and impression formation. An important and powerful aspect of person perception is evaluation or liking
  • 25. Trait inferences that negotiators make about the other party's  intelligence  sociability  expertise  skill  ability  cooperativeness competitiveness.
  • 26. the attributions that negotiators make to explain the behavior of their bargaining opponent the predictions they make about the opponent's future behavior Perceptions of the other party are hypothesized
  • 27. Perceptions of the Self Include:  many of the dimensions relevant to perceptions of the bargaining opponent, such as skill, cooperativeness, fairness. negotiators' judgments of their own interests, values, goals, and risk preferences social comparisons between the self and the other party The hypothesized mental structures used to represent self- perceptions are self-schemata
  • 29. Individual Differences Approach Identify stable characteristics of people that reliably affect their bargaining behavior and performance. Collection of disparate hypotheses, predictions, and low-level theoretical statements
  • 30. General classes of theoretical models characterize the individual difference approach: Direct-effect models Contingency models
  • 31. Direct-effect models • Individual differences directly influence social behavior. e.g.: The hypothesis that women perceive conflict differently than do men. Individual differences in the negotiation literature include:  relationship orientation (Machiavellianism; cooperative-competitive orientation)  cognitive ability (cognitive complexity; perspective-taking ability)  gender/ sex role orientation
  • 32. Contingency Model negotiation behavior is determined by:  specific characteristics of persons particular features of the situation e.g.: Machiavellian bargainer will take advantage of a non-Machiavellian bargaining opponent when the interaction occurs face to face, but not when a barrier obstructs their visual contact.
  • 33. The impact of individual differences on economic and social-psychological measures of performance Economic Criteria Mutual Agreement Fry (1985) proposed a contingency model relationship between negotiator Machiavellianism and visual accessibility.  low- high pairs negotiating face to face would be most likely to fail to reach agreement
  • 34. Joint Outcomes Cognitive ability, Integrative bargaining situations often require problem-solving behaviors to maximize joint gain. cognitively complex negotiators entertain more alternative conceptions of bargaining situations and gather and integrate more information during bargaining.
  • 35.  Gender: • Other researchers have hypothesized that the sex composition of the dyad may affect integrative bargaining outcomes. e.g.: Men seek to maximize their own gains, whereas women respond to the interpersonal aspect of the situation. However, there was no support for this prediction.
  • 36. Individual Outcomes Machiavellianism, In general, Machiavellian bargainers claim more resources than do non- Machiavellian bargainers . Trait Machiavellianism may not directly influence negotiation behavior but may instead interact with situational and task constraints to influence performance.
  • 37.  Cognitive ability, increase negotiators' ability to claim resources Negotiators with high perspective-taking ability earned higher outcomes than did those with low perspective-taking ability.
  • 38. Social-Psychological Measures . Investigators of individual differences on social-psychological measures have primarily explored the direct effects of gender and sex role orientation on perceptions. Perceptions of the Bargaining Situation  Men are more or less effective negotiators than are women, men may perceive conflict differently than do women. In general, men are more concerned with winning and maximizing their outcomes, whereas women are more concerned with maintaining the relationship.
  • 39. For example: Pinkley found that women were more likely than men to interpret a conflict situation in relationship terms, whereas men were more concerned with the exchange of resources.
  • 40. Perceptions of the Opponent . Women tend to perceive their opponents as similar to themselves, whereas men perceive themselves as fundamentally different from their opponents
  • 41. Perceptions of the Self Women engage in more self-derogation during negotiation than do men. Men perceive themselves as more powerful than do women
  • 42. . Motivational Approaches  Examine the influence of aspirations and goals on bargaining behavior and outcomes.  Two general theoretical approaches have developed within this broad area. 1.aspiration is a continuous, unidimensional concept ranging from low to high . 2.bargaining goals are not unidimensional and that the maximization of gain is not the primary goal of bargaining
  • 43. The impact of individual differences on economic and social-psychological measures of performance Economic Criteria Mutual Agreement  A key prediction of aspiration-level models is that high aspirations block opportunities for mutual agreement and increase the likelihood of an impasse. Two separate lines of evidence support this prediction:  studies of constituency pressure  explicit goal setting
  • 44. Constituency pressure, negotiators who represent a larger group or constituency feel accountable to their constituency and pressured to meet their goals and, consequently, adopt higher aspiration levels and remain firmer in their aspirations than do negotiators who are not under constituency pressure.
  • 45. Explicit goal setting, manipulate negotiators' aspirations by providing them with a specific goal or target value to achieve. Most of this research has been conducted using the experimental bargaining market paradigm .
  • 46. Specific, challenging, or demanding goals complete fewer successful transactions than do those not given challenging goals. High aspirations have more unsuccessful transactions than do negotiators with lower aspirations.
  • 47. Dual Concern Model suggests that the relationship between aspiration and bargaining outcomes is more complex and requires consideration of negotiators' concern for the other party in addition to their own level of aspiration.
  • 48. integrative out- comes are reached through joint problem-solving. Joint Outcomes Explicit goal setting is derived from aspiration- level theories. In general, higher aspirations are predicted to lead to greater joint profit.
  • 49. Individual Outcomes Aspirations also improve distributive bargaining behavior. Bargainers who have specific, explicit goals achieve higher individual outcomes than do bargainers not given explicit goals to achieve.
  • 50. Social Psychological Measures constituency pressure view bargaining situations as more competitive and less productive than do bargainers who do not represent a constituency or at least do not feel pressured to maximize profits for a constituency.
  • 51. Perceptions of the Other Party  Negotiators under pressure from their constituencies to maximize gains perceived themselves as more dissimilar to their opponents than did negotiators who were not under pressure to maximize gains.
  • 52. Cognitive Approach The basis of the cognitive approach is information-processing theory. Information is typically represented as , A list of features  concepts are represented as nodes labeled with a word or a phrase,  Relations between idea nodes are symbolized theoretically as links in a network.
  • 53. Economic Criteria Mutual Agreement Two factors affect risk aversion: The framing of negotiation payoffs Negotiators' judgments of the probability that their offer would be selected by a neutral third party under final offer arbitration.
  • 54. Joint Outcomes Framing of negotiation payoffs a positive frame (who view negotiation in terms of maximizing gain) should be risk averse, whereas those with a negative frame (who view negotiation in terms of minimizing loss) should be risk seeking.
  • 55. Judgment accuracy Misperceptions of the other party are a primary cause of suboptimal outcomes in negotiation.
  • 56. Two critical judgments that negotiators make about the other party's interests: compatibility judgments determine whether all or only some of their interests are incompatible with those of the other party.  Priority judgments negotiators' perceptions of the other party's evaluation of the relative importance of the to- be-negotiated issues.
  • 57. Social Psychological Criteria Perceptions of the Bargaining Situation Negotiators bring a fixed-pie, or win-lose perception to negotiation. Perceptions of the Opponent Negotiators tend to perceive the other party as completely dissimilar to themselves.
  • 58. Perceptions of the Self Self-serving evaluations, Negotiators make self-serving attributions and evaluations in bargaining. Example, negotiators who are unable to reach mutually acceptable agreements blame their opponent for the failure, whereas they usually attribute success to themselves.
  • 59. conclusion Theoretical Issues Theoretical approaches are necessarily contradictory. The theory should be accessible to objective, economic analysis; Explain the perceptual experience of negotiators and their judgment processes. A theory should explain the relationships between judgment and behavior in negotiation
  • 60. In addition to explaining the correspondences between judgment and behavior, the theory should explain discrepancies. Motivation and goals are essential ingredients in a theory of negotiation
  • 61. Empirical Issues Economic measures of performance have been used more extensively than social-psychological measures. Why it is important to include both measures in research programs:  negotiators typically do not have the information necessary to make objective judgments of the bargaining situation; their understanding of the bargaining situation is based on their perceptions.
  • 62. It is useful to compare negotiators' perceptions with objective measures Negotiators' perceptions are important to examine because they influence behavior in negotiation.