My friends are all alike - the relation between liking and perceived similarity in person perception

被引:62
作者
Alves, Hans [1 ]
Koch, Alex [1 ]
Unkelbach, Christian [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cologne, Cologne, Germany
关键词
Person perception; Impression formation; Valence asymmetries; Law of effect; OUT-GROUP HOMOGENEITY; SOCIAL CATEGORIZATION; IN-GROUP; POSITIVE MOOD; VARIABILITY; FACE; DENSITY; IDENTIFICATION; RECOGNITION; INFORMATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.jesp.2015.10.011
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Past research showed that people accumulate more knowledge about other people and objects they like compared to those they dislike. More knowledge is commonly assumed to lead to more differentiated mental representations; therefore, people should perceive others they like as less similar to one another than others they dislike. We predict the opposite outcome based on the density hypothesis (Unkelbach, Fiedler, Bayer, Stegmtiller, & Danner, 2008); accordingly, positive impressions are less diverse than negative impressions as there are only a few ways to be liked but many ways to be disliked. Therefore, people should perceive liked others as more similar to one another than disliked others even though they have more knowledge about liked others. Seven experiments confirm this counterintuitive prediction and show a strong association between liking and perceived similarity in person perception. We discuss the implications of these results for different aspects of person perception. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:103 / 117
页数:15
相关论文
共 84 条
[71]   Preference Invites Categorization [J].
Smallman, Rachel ;
Roese, Neal J. .
PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2008, 19 (12) :1228-1232
[72]   Positive mood and the perception of variability within and between groups [J].
Stroessner, SJ ;
Mackie, DM ;
Michalsen, V .
GROUP PROCESSES & INTERGROUP RELATIONS, 2005, 8 (01) :5-25
[73]   SOCIAL CATEGORIZATION AND INTERGROUP BEHAVIOR [J].
TAJFEL, H ;
BILLIG, MG ;
BUNDY, RP ;
FLAMENT, C .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1971, 1 (02) :149-177
[74]   ASYMMETRICAL EFFECTS OF POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE EVENTS - THE MOBILIZATION MINIMIZATION HYPOTHESIS [J].
TAYLOR, SE .
PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 1991, 110 (01) :67-85
[75]   Eliminating Aggregation Bias in Experimental Research: Random Coefficient Analysis as an Alternative to Performing a 'by-subjects' and/or 'by-items' ANOVA [J].
Thompson, Glenn L. .
TUTORIALS IN QUANTITATIVE METHODS FOR PSYCHOLOGY, 2008, 4 (01) :21-34
[76]  
Thorndike E. L., 1898, PSYCHOL REV MONOGR S, V8
[77]   MULTIDIMENSIONAL-SCALING OF SIMILARITY [J].
TORGERSON, WS .
PSYCHOMETRIKA, 1965, 30 (04) :379-393
[78]  
TVERSKY A, 1977, PSYCHOL REV, V84, P327, DOI 10.1037/h0026750
[79]   Why positive information is processed faster:: The density hypothesis [J].
Unkelbach, Christian ;
Fiedler, Klaus ;
Bayer, Myriam ;
Stegmueller, Martin ;
Danner, Daniel .
JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2008, 95 (01) :36-49
[80]   Positivity Advantages in Social Information Processing [J].
Unkelbach, Christian .
SOCIAL AND PERSONALITY PSYCHOLOGY COMPASS, 2012, 6 (01) :83-94