The moderating role of affective-cognitive consistency in the effects of affectively-based and cognitively-based attitudes on consummatory and instrumental behaviors was explored using two experimental studies in the intergroup context. Study 1 revealed that affectively-based attitudes were better predictors than cognitively-based attitudes regardless of affective-cognitive consistency for consummatory behaviors (e.g., undergraduates' supportive behaviors toward government officials). Study 2, which investigated task groups' supportive behaviors toward an immediate supervisory group, found that for these instrumental behaviors cognitively-based attitudes were better predictors than affectively-based attitudes only when affective-cognitive c...
Two experiments examined the hypothesis that the sequence of affect and cognition in an attitude&apo...
Two studies examined the proclivity of individual differences in attitude structure. Study 1 found c...
Verplanken, Hofstee, and Janssen (1998) found that the affective component of attitude is accessed m...
The moderating role of affective-cognitive consistency in the effects of affectively-based and cogni...
<p>This figure was plotted by using the unstandardized regression weights with affective-cognitive c...
<p>This figure was plotted by using the unstandardized regression weights with affective-cognitive c...
Affective-cognitive consistency (ACC) refers to the degree of alignment between the affective and co...
The effects of structural consistency including affective-cognitive consistency (ACC) and attitude b...
Multicomponent models of attitude (e.g., Eagly & Chaiken, 1993; Zanna & Rempel, 1988) postulate that...
In this chapter, we describe and integrate advances in the study of inter-individual differences in ...
Research has demonstrated that some individuals possess attitudes that are highly consistent with bo...
Research has demonstrated that some individuals possess attitudes that are highly consistent with bo...
Two experiments were conducted to test predictions derived from social identity/self-categorization ...
This study tested the social identity-self-categorization theory reconceptualization of the role of ...
Prominent psychology research indicates an attitude is composed of three separate components, cognit...
Two experiments examined the hypothesis that the sequence of affect and cognition in an attitude&apo...
Two studies examined the proclivity of individual differences in attitude structure. Study 1 found c...
Verplanken, Hofstee, and Janssen (1998) found that the affective component of attitude is accessed m...
The moderating role of affective-cognitive consistency in the effects of affectively-based and cogni...
<p>This figure was plotted by using the unstandardized regression weights with affective-cognitive c...
<p>This figure was plotted by using the unstandardized regression weights with affective-cognitive c...
Affective-cognitive consistency (ACC) refers to the degree of alignment between the affective and co...
The effects of structural consistency including affective-cognitive consistency (ACC) and attitude b...
Multicomponent models of attitude (e.g., Eagly & Chaiken, 1993; Zanna & Rempel, 1988) postulate that...
In this chapter, we describe and integrate advances in the study of inter-individual differences in ...
Research has demonstrated that some individuals possess attitudes that are highly consistent with bo...
Research has demonstrated that some individuals possess attitudes that are highly consistent with bo...
Two experiments were conducted to test predictions derived from social identity/self-categorization ...
This study tested the social identity-self-categorization theory reconceptualization of the role of ...
Prominent psychology research indicates an attitude is composed of three separate components, cognit...
Two experiments examined the hypothesis that the sequence of affect and cognition in an attitude&apo...
Two studies examined the proclivity of individual differences in attitude structure. Study 1 found c...
Verplanken, Hofstee, and Janssen (1998) found that the affective component of attitude is accessed m...