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pro vyhledávání: '"Anson E. Long"'
Publikováno v:
Group Processes & Intergroup Relations. 25:990-1010
Literature devoted to understanding the experiences of individuals who do not fit the cultural mold—those who belong to minority, stigmatized, or underrepresented groups—demonstrates that nonnormative status goes hand in hand with a range of nega
Publikováno v:
The British journal of social psychologyReferences. 61(2)
People exhibit a strong need for belief validation, which they meet by sharing reality with others. Here, we examine the hypothesis that existential isolation - feeling alone in one's experiences - interferes with people's ability to share reality an
Publikováno v:
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin. 44:1601-1614
Previous research on I-sharing (the belief that one has shared the same, in-the-moment subjective experience with another person) revealed its promise for improving intergroup relations. We expand on this research by (a) pursuing the mechanism underl
Publikováno v:
Personality and Individual Differences. 105:54-63
Although often treated as a singular construct, social isolation can assume an interpersonal or an existential form ( Yalom, 1980 ). Here we develop an individual difference measure of existential isolation, or, isolation with regard to one's experie
Autor:
Elizabeth C. Pinel, Anson E. Long
Publikováno v:
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin. 38:296-307
Believing one shares a subjective experience with another (i.e., I-sharing) fosters connections among strangers and alters perceptions of the ingroup and outgroup. In this article, the authors ask whether I-sharing also fosters liking for members of
Publikováno v:
Social Cognition. 28:277-289
I-sharing constitutes a specific form of shared reality: the sharing of in-the-moment, phenomenological experience (Pinel, Long, Landau, Alexander, & Pyszczynski, 2006). As such, I-sharing research can inform research on shared reality theory (Hardin
Publikováno v:
European Journal of Social Psychology. 38:1184-1192
Researchers currently know very little about how African Americans regard themselves and their salient outgroup (i.e., European Americans). The current study examines how experiences with individual ingroup and outgroup members affect these evaluatio
Publikováno v:
The Journal of social psychology. 155(6)
People believe that they have shared an identical subjective experience—that they have I-shared—when they react identically and simultaneously to the same stimulus. Despite growing evidence for I-sharing, researchers have yet to ask whether simul
Publikováno v:
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 90:243-257
The authors introduce the construct of I-sharing--the belief that one shares an identical subjective experience with another person--and the role it plays in liking. In Studies 1-3, participants indicated their liking for an objectively similar and a