From seeing to being: subliminal social comparisons affect implicit and explicit self-evaluations
- PMID: 15491272
- DOI: 10.1037/0022-3514.87.4.468
From seeing to being: subliminal social comparisons affect implicit and explicit self-evaluations
Retraction in
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Retraction of Stapel and Blanton (2004). From seeing to being: subliminal social comparisons affect implicit and explicit self-evaluations.J Pers Soc Psychol. 2013 Jan;104(1):86. doi: 10.1037/a0031410. J Pers Soc Psychol. 2013. PMID: 23316918 No abstract available.
Abstract
The authors hypothesize that social comparisons can have automatic influences on self-perceptions. This was tested by determining whether subliminal exposure to comparison information influences implicit and explicit self-evaluation. Study 1 showed that subliminal exposure to social comparison information increased the accessibility of the self. Study 2 revealed that subliminal exposure to social comparison information resulted in a contrast effect on explicit self-evaluation. Study 3 showed that subliminal exposure to social comparison information affects self-evaluations more easily than it affects mood or evaluations of other people. Studies 4 and 5 replicated these self-evaluation effects and extended them to implicit measures. Study 6 showed that automatic comparisons are responsive to a person's perceptual needs, such that they only occur when people are uncertain about themselves. Implications for theories of social cognition, judgment, and comparison are discussed.
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