Literature on attitude similarity suggests that sharing similar attitudes enhances interpersonal liking, but it remains unanswered whether this effect also holds for ambivalent attitudes. In the present research, we shed light on the role attitudinal ambivalence plays in interpersonal liking. Specifically, we examine whether people express ambivalence strategically to generate a positive or negative social image, and whether this is dependent on the attitudinal ambivalence of their perceiver. We test two alternative hypotheses. In line with the attitude-similarity effect, people should express ambivalence toward ambivalent others to enhance interpersonal liking, as sharing ambivalence might socially validate the latter's experience of attit...
In the present study, we explored the role of liking in the social induction of affect. Dispositiona...
Investigated the relationship of attitudinal ambivalence, confidence in attitudes, and processing in...
Recent interest in people's ambivalence about social behaviours and social categories has provoked a...
Literature on attitude similarity suggests that sharing similar attitudes enhances interpersonal lik...
Literature on attitude similarity suggests that sharing similar attitudes enhances interpersonal lik...
Extant research has found a relation between holding conflicting attitudes with a familiar person (i...
Sharing attitudes leads to liking. While this similarity effect is well-established, past research r...
Ambivalence refers to the experience of having both positive and negative thoughts and feelings at t...
This article reports two studies designed to test the hypotheses that lower levels of attitudinal am...
Research on attitudinal ambivalence started in the early 1970s, forty years after the first wave of ...
While research has studied the consequences of being ambivalent about a single attitude object, we k...
Would you like a stranger more who shifts his/her attitudes to more closely align with yours? How wo...
The experience of attitudinal ambivalence (subjective ambivalence) is important because it predicts ...
Much research has emerged recently examining attitudinal ambivalence. One recent finding suggests th...
Attitudinal ambivalence has been found to moderate attitude–intention relations. However, no prior w...
In the present study, we explored the role of liking in the social induction of affect. Dispositiona...
Investigated the relationship of attitudinal ambivalence, confidence in attitudes, and processing in...
Recent interest in people's ambivalence about social behaviours and social categories has provoked a...
Literature on attitude similarity suggests that sharing similar attitudes enhances interpersonal lik...
Literature on attitude similarity suggests that sharing similar attitudes enhances interpersonal lik...
Extant research has found a relation between holding conflicting attitudes with a familiar person (i...
Sharing attitudes leads to liking. While this similarity effect is well-established, past research r...
Ambivalence refers to the experience of having both positive and negative thoughts and feelings at t...
This article reports two studies designed to test the hypotheses that lower levels of attitudinal am...
Research on attitudinal ambivalence started in the early 1970s, forty years after the first wave of ...
While research has studied the consequences of being ambivalent about a single attitude object, we k...
Would you like a stranger more who shifts his/her attitudes to more closely align with yours? How wo...
The experience of attitudinal ambivalence (subjective ambivalence) is important because it predicts ...
Much research has emerged recently examining attitudinal ambivalence. One recent finding suggests th...
Attitudinal ambivalence has been found to moderate attitude–intention relations. However, no prior w...
In the present study, we explored the role of liking in the social induction of affect. Dispositiona...
Investigated the relationship of attitudinal ambivalence, confidence in attitudes, and processing in...
Recent interest in people's ambivalence about social behaviours and social categories has provoked a...