Abstract. Communion and agency are fundamental dimensions of social perception and judgment. Previous research revealed a primacy of communion in social information processing. The present research investigates whether there is a similar asymmetry in the “density” of communion and agency. We test whether communal content is more densely clustered in memory than agentic content, that is, more similar to other communal content than agentic content is similar to other agentic content. Three multidimensional scaling studies address this question and suggest an interaction with valence: While negative communal content is more densely clustered than negative agentic content, we find no differences in density between positive communal and positive...
Two hypotheses concerning the relative importance of agentic versus communal traits as predictors of...
The fundamental dimensions of social judgment and social evaluation, called agency and communion, ar...
Social acceptance and the development of one's competencies and status are fundamental aspects of th...
How are people who generally see others positively evaluated themselves? We propose that the answer ...
How are people who generally see others positively evaluated themselves? We propose that the answer ...
On the basis of previous research, the authors hypothesize that (a) person descriptive terms can be ...
Since Brown and Gilman's pioneering study (1960) students of social relations have stressed two rela...
Agency and communion are the two fundamental content dimensions in psychology. The two dimensions fi...
This thesis explored linkages between aspects of Social Identity Theory (SIT) and the constructs of...
In this study, we examined common measures of agency (AG), communion (CM), and unmiti-gated agency (...
It has been argued that agency and communion define the fundamental dimensions of human existence. A...
Despite many convergences in theorizing and research on the two fundamental dimensions of social jud...
The authors suggest that social comparison research has neglected communal feelings and concerns bec...
How does social class affect people’s goals in social interactions? A rank-based perspective suggest...
Social judgments necessarily carry evaluative connotations that may mask other dimensions of interes...
Two hypotheses concerning the relative importance of agentic versus communal traits as predictors of...
The fundamental dimensions of social judgment and social evaluation, called agency and communion, ar...
Social acceptance and the development of one's competencies and status are fundamental aspects of th...
How are people who generally see others positively evaluated themselves? We propose that the answer ...
How are people who generally see others positively evaluated themselves? We propose that the answer ...
On the basis of previous research, the authors hypothesize that (a) person descriptive terms can be ...
Since Brown and Gilman's pioneering study (1960) students of social relations have stressed two rela...
Agency and communion are the two fundamental content dimensions in psychology. The two dimensions fi...
This thesis explored linkages between aspects of Social Identity Theory (SIT) and the constructs of...
In this study, we examined common measures of agency (AG), communion (CM), and unmiti-gated agency (...
It has been argued that agency and communion define the fundamental dimensions of human existence. A...
Despite many convergences in theorizing and research on the two fundamental dimensions of social jud...
The authors suggest that social comparison research has neglected communal feelings and concerns bec...
How does social class affect people’s goals in social interactions? A rank-based perspective suggest...
Social judgments necessarily carry evaluative connotations that may mask other dimensions of interes...
Two hypotheses concerning the relative importance of agentic versus communal traits as predictors of...
The fundamental dimensions of social judgment and social evaluation, called agency and communion, ar...
Social acceptance and the development of one's competencies and status are fundamental aspects of th...