Psychological reactance is typically assumed to motivate resistance to controlling peer influences and societal prohibitions. However, some peer influences encourage behaviors prohibited by society. We consider whether reactant individuals are sensitive to such opportunities to enhance their autonomy. We specifically propose a self-regulatory perspective on reactance, wherein freedom/autonomy is the superordinate goal, and thus highly reactant individuals will be sensitive to peer influences that could enhance their behavioral freedoms. In 2 studies, we find that reactant individuals can be cooperative in response to autonomy-supportive peer influences. Participants read a scenario in which a peer’s intentions to engage in substance use wer...
The concept of autonomy has received considerable attention in both –philosophy and psychology. From...
In social interactions, individuals may sometimes pursue their own interests at the expense of their...
Health communications are often unsuccessful at reducing risky behavior. Reactance theory was tested...
Psychological reactance is typically assumed to motivate resistance to controlling peer influences a...
Psychological reactance is typically assumed to motivate resistance to controlling peer influences a...
We examine how chronic reactance (a motivation to maintain decision freedom) can facilitate suscepti...
The urge to rebel against external control affects social interactions in many domains of our societ...
Autonomy, often associated with an open and reflective evaluation of experience, is sometimes confus...
Psychological reactance is a construct that motivates people to restore lost or threatened freedoms ...
Threats to our freedom are part of our daily social interactions. They are accompanied by an aversiv...
The freedom concept has been an important one, to daily engagement in activities and everything that...
This paper introduces the social self-restriction (SSR) model, which highlights a drawback associate...
Psychological reactance occurs in response to threats posed to perceived behavioral freedoms. Resear...
© 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Low self-control is often associated with poor life outcomes. Here, we...
Psychological reactance is a motivational state caused by a perceived threat to an individual\u27s f...
The concept of autonomy has received considerable attention in both –philosophy and psychology. From...
In social interactions, individuals may sometimes pursue their own interests at the expense of their...
Health communications are often unsuccessful at reducing risky behavior. Reactance theory was tested...
Psychological reactance is typically assumed to motivate resistance to controlling peer influences a...
Psychological reactance is typically assumed to motivate resistance to controlling peer influences a...
We examine how chronic reactance (a motivation to maintain decision freedom) can facilitate suscepti...
The urge to rebel against external control affects social interactions in many domains of our societ...
Autonomy, often associated with an open and reflective evaluation of experience, is sometimes confus...
Psychological reactance is a construct that motivates people to restore lost or threatened freedoms ...
Threats to our freedom are part of our daily social interactions. They are accompanied by an aversiv...
The freedom concept has been an important one, to daily engagement in activities and everything that...
This paper introduces the social self-restriction (SSR) model, which highlights a drawback associate...
Psychological reactance occurs in response to threats posed to perceived behavioral freedoms. Resear...
© 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Low self-control is often associated with poor life outcomes. Here, we...
Psychological reactance is a motivational state caused by a perceived threat to an individual\u27s f...
The concept of autonomy has received considerable attention in both –philosophy and psychology. From...
In social interactions, individuals may sometimes pursue their own interests at the expense of their...
Health communications are often unsuccessful at reducing risky behavior. Reactance theory was tested...