a Marian University.
J Soc Psychol. 2014 Sep-Oct;154(5):384-400. doi: 10.1080/00224545.2014.914882.
In these two studies, we examined whether the inferences people make about likable and dislikable targets align with the predictions of balance theory. We hypothesized that people exhibit a liking-similarity effect by perceiving greater similarity with a likable person than a dislikable person. To test this hypothesis, we manipulated the likability of a target person and then assessed participants' perceptions of similarity to that target person. In both studies, people rated likable others as more similar to themselves than dislikable others across a variety of domains (e.g., attitudes, personality characteristics, behaviors). In Study 2, individual differences in self-concept clarity, self-esteem, and preference for consistency moderated the liking-similarity effect.
在这两项研究中,我们考察了人们对可爱和不可爱的目标的推断是否与平衡理论的预测一致。我们假设人们通过感知与可爱的人比不可爱的人更大的相似性来表现出喜欢相似性效应。为了检验这一假设,我们操纵了目标人物的可爱程度,然后评估了参与者对该目标人物的感知相似性。在两项研究中,人们在各种领域(例如态度、人格特征、行为)中都将可爱的人评定为比不可爱的人更相似。在研究 2 中,自我概念清晰度、自尊和一致性偏好的个体差异调节了喜欢相似性效应。