Growing evidence reveals that people rely on heuristic cues when processing online information. The current research, by adopting a construal level theory approach, examined whether psychological distance cues within online messages influence message processing. According to construal level theory, spatial and hypothetical distances (i.e., probabilities, likelihoods) share an association based on psychological distance. Construal level literature suggests that people overgeneralize this association and attribute unlikely events to distant places and likely events to close-by places. The current research provides a novel test of this relationship in an online communication setting. In two within-subjects experiments (Studies 1 and 2), we pre...
Three studies examined the effect of primed psychological distance on level of perceptual construal,...
The study examines the effect of psychological distance on psychological reactance toward e-smoking ...
How do people judge the veracity of a message? The negativity bias in judgments of truth describes t...
Growing evidence reveals that people rely on heuristic cues when processing online information. The ...
Growing evidence reveals that people rely on heuristic cues when processing online information. The ...
Consumers have at their disposal an ever-increasing variety of new technologies with which to receiv...
Several authors have shown how communication using digital devices influences the experience of psyc...
Across three essays, my dissertation examines novel implications of the link between psychological d...
Liberman, 2003), people use a more abstract, high construal level when judging, perceiving, and pred...
Construal Level Theory (CLT) [1] defines psychological distance as any object, event, or person that...
Abstract. Growing evidence points to a bidirectional relationship between spatial distance and level...
This chapter examines two hypotheses on the psychological effects of spatial distance, both of which...
The affordances of the internet, particularly as manifest in social network site platforms, allow fo...
How do mediated social interactions affect your perceptions of the world around you? We exte...
Construal Level Theory (CLT) [1] defines psychological distance as any object, event, or person that...
Three studies examined the effect of primed psychological distance on level of perceptual construal,...
The study examines the effect of psychological distance on psychological reactance toward e-smoking ...
How do people judge the veracity of a message? The negativity bias in judgments of truth describes t...
Growing evidence reveals that people rely on heuristic cues when processing online information. The ...
Growing evidence reveals that people rely on heuristic cues when processing online information. The ...
Consumers have at their disposal an ever-increasing variety of new technologies with which to receiv...
Several authors have shown how communication using digital devices influences the experience of psyc...
Across three essays, my dissertation examines novel implications of the link between psychological d...
Liberman, 2003), people use a more abstract, high construal level when judging, perceiving, and pred...
Construal Level Theory (CLT) [1] defines psychological distance as any object, event, or person that...
Abstract. Growing evidence points to a bidirectional relationship between spatial distance and level...
This chapter examines two hypotheses on the psychological effects of spatial distance, both of which...
The affordances of the internet, particularly as manifest in social network site platforms, allow fo...
How do mediated social interactions affect your perceptions of the world around you? We exte...
Construal Level Theory (CLT) [1] defines psychological distance as any object, event, or person that...
Three studies examined the effect of primed psychological distance on level of perceptual construal,...
The study examines the effect of psychological distance on psychological reactance toward e-smoking ...
How do people judge the veracity of a message? The negativity bias in judgments of truth describes t...