Behavioral mimicry is the changing of movements or mannerisms to match that of an interaction partner. The phenomenon occurs nonconsciously and has been shown to increase the level of liking between interaction partners (Chartrand & Bargh, 1999). Moderators of mimicry include in-group membership (Lakin, Chartrand, & Arkin, 2008), desire to be liked (Lakin & Chartrand, 2003), and social exclusion (Lakin, Chartrand, & Arkin, 2008). Attractiveness level has been shown to have a substantial effect on how individuals perceive a person (Ahola, Angela, Christianson, & Hellstrm, 2009). The current study addressed whether attractiveness level of a female in a projected video would impact the amount of mimicry exhibited by females participating in th...
People often mimic each other's behaviors. As a consequence, they share each other's emotional and c...
Item does not contain fulltextStudies on short-term mating (STM) yield sex differences regarding pre...
Abstract: Aims: For social psychologists, mimicry could serve a function of “social glue”, binding p...
Based on the recent literature indicating that nonconscious behavioural mimicry is partly goal direc...
Contains fulltext : 90102.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Mimicry has be...
Past research has shown that mimicry has a number of pro-social consequences for interaction partner...
Mimicry, the subconscious copying of an interaction partner´s verbal expressions and nonverbal behav...
Abstract Two experiments investigated the impact of group membership on non-conscious behavioral mim...
Previous research suggests that non-verbal mimicry, the copying of another’s body movements during i...
People judge, evaluate, and treat attractive people better than moderately attractive or unattractiv...
People judge, evaluate, and treat attractive people better than moderately attractive or unattractiv...
People often mimic each other's behaviors. As a consequence, they share each other's emotional and c...
People often mimic each other's behaviors. As a consequence, they share each other's emotional and c...
People often mimic each other's behaviors. As a consequence, they share each other's emotional and c...
The chameleon effect refers to nonconscious mimicry of the postures, mannerisms, facial expressions,...
People often mimic each other's behaviors. As a consequence, they share each other's emotional and c...
Item does not contain fulltextStudies on short-term mating (STM) yield sex differences regarding pre...
Abstract: Aims: For social psychologists, mimicry could serve a function of “social glue”, binding p...
Based on the recent literature indicating that nonconscious behavioural mimicry is partly goal direc...
Contains fulltext : 90102.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Mimicry has be...
Past research has shown that mimicry has a number of pro-social consequences for interaction partner...
Mimicry, the subconscious copying of an interaction partner´s verbal expressions and nonverbal behav...
Abstract Two experiments investigated the impact of group membership on non-conscious behavioral mim...
Previous research suggests that non-verbal mimicry, the copying of another’s body movements during i...
People judge, evaluate, and treat attractive people better than moderately attractive or unattractiv...
People judge, evaluate, and treat attractive people better than moderately attractive or unattractiv...
People often mimic each other's behaviors. As a consequence, they share each other's emotional and c...
People often mimic each other's behaviors. As a consequence, they share each other's emotional and c...
People often mimic each other's behaviors. As a consequence, they share each other's emotional and c...
The chameleon effect refers to nonconscious mimicry of the postures, mannerisms, facial expressions,...
People often mimic each other's behaviors. As a consequence, they share each other's emotional and c...
Item does not contain fulltextStudies on short-term mating (STM) yield sex differences regarding pre...
Abstract: Aims: For social psychologists, mimicry could serve a function of “social glue”, binding p...