Previous research has demonstrated that nonconscious interpersonal mimicry engenders liking, affiliation, empathy, and other positive social consequences. Some of these consequences have recently been shown to go beyond the dyad. In other words, interpersonal mimicry not only affects the way we feel toward our immediate interaction partner, but also affects our feelings and behavior toward other people in general. The goal of the present research is to understand why it is that nonconscious mimicry has consequences that go beyond the dyad. Specifically, it is hypothesized and found that being mimicked during social interaction shifts self–construals such that they become more interdependent and “other–oriented” (Study 1). Accordingly, inter...
Abstract: Aims: For social psychologists, mimicry could serve a function of “social glue”, binding p...
Item does not contain fulltextHuman mimicry is ubiquitous, and often occurs without the awareness of...
Mimicry is a pervasive and ubiquitous human behaviour with generally positive consequences, resultin...
Contains fulltext : 56369.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Previous resea...
Contains fulltext : 90102.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Mimicry has be...
Previous research suggests that non-verbal mimicry, the copying of another’s body movements during i...
Contains fulltext : 64791.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Recent studies...
People often mimic each other's behaviors. As a consequence, they share each other's emotional and c...
One striking characteristic of human social interactions is unconscious mimicry; people have a tende...
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...
This thesis deals with the social functions of mimicry. Mimicry was defined broadly as 'doing what o...
This study investigated the effects of being mimicked on automatic imitation indices and social cohe...
Facial expressions play a fundamental role in social interactions, as demonstrated by our spontaneou...
Abstract: Aims: For social psychologists, mimicry could serve a function of “social glue”, binding p...
Item does not contain fulltextHuman mimicry is ubiquitous, and often occurs without the awareness of...
Mimicry is a pervasive and ubiquitous human behaviour with generally positive consequences, resultin...
Contains fulltext : 56369.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Previous resea...
Contains fulltext : 90102.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Mimicry has be...
Previous research suggests that non-verbal mimicry, the copying of another’s body movements during i...
Contains fulltext : 64791.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Recent studies...
People often mimic each other's behaviors. As a consequence, they share each other's emotional and c...
One striking characteristic of human social interactions is unconscious mimicry; people have a tende...
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...
This thesis deals with the social functions of mimicry. Mimicry was defined broadly as 'doing what o...
This study investigated the effects of being mimicked on automatic imitation indices and social cohe...
Facial expressions play a fundamental role in social interactions, as demonstrated by our spontaneou...
Abstract: Aims: For social psychologists, mimicry could serve a function of “social glue”, binding p...
Item does not contain fulltextHuman mimicry is ubiquitous, and often occurs without the awareness of...
Mimicry is a pervasive and ubiquitous human behaviour with generally positive consequences, resultin...