There is a broad theoretical and empirical interest in spontaneous mimicry, or the automatic reproduction of a model's behavior. Evidence shows that people mimic models they like, and that mimicry enhances liking for the mimic. Yet, there is no satisfactory account of this phenomenon, especially in terms of its functional significance. While affiliation is often cited as the driver of mimicry, we argue that mimicry is primarily driven by a learning process that helps to produce the appropriate bodily and emotional responses to relevant social situations. Because the learning process and the resulting knowledge is implicit, it cannot easily be rejected, criticized, revised, and employed by the learner in a deliberative or deceptive manner. W...
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...
Mimicry has become a subject of great interest because of its ability to signal affiliation and rapp...
Item does not contain fulltextHuman mimicry is ubiquitous, and often occurs without the awareness of...
One striking characteristic of human social interactions is unconscious mimicry; people have a tende...
Previous research suggests that non-verbal mimicry, the copying of another’s body movements during i...
Facial mimicry—the imitation of the facial expressions of others—has been regarded as one of the und...
Abstract Two experiments investigated the impact of group membership on non-conscious behavioral mim...
Contains fulltext : 19244_mimi.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)This disser...
Abstract: Aims: For social psychologists, mimicry could serve a function of “social glue”, binding p...
People often mimic each other's behaviors. As a consequence, they share each other's emotional and c...
Contains fulltext : 90102.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Mimicry has be...
Contains fulltext : 64791.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Recent studies...
The spontaneous tendency to mimic others is an ubiquitous phenomenon characterizing social interacti...
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...
Mimicry has become a subject of great interest because of its ability to signal affiliation and rapp...
Item does not contain fulltextHuman mimicry is ubiquitous, and often occurs without the awareness of...
One striking characteristic of human social interactions is unconscious mimicry; people have a tende...
Previous research suggests that non-verbal mimicry, the copying of another’s body movements during i...
Facial mimicry—the imitation of the facial expressions of others—has been regarded as one of the und...
Abstract Two experiments investigated the impact of group membership on non-conscious behavioral mim...
Contains fulltext : 19244_mimi.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)This disser...
Abstract: Aims: For social psychologists, mimicry could serve a function of “social glue”, binding p...
People often mimic each other's behaviors. As a consequence, they share each other's emotional and c...
Contains fulltext : 90102.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Mimicry has be...
Contains fulltext : 64791.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Recent studies...
The spontaneous tendency to mimic others is an ubiquitous phenomenon characterizing social interacti...
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...