Abstract
Comparison-induced distortion theory (Choplin, Toward a comparison-induced distortion theory of judgment and decision making, Nova Science Publishers, Inc., 2007, Choplin and Hummel, Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 131: 270–286, 2005) describes how comparison words like “better” suggest quantitative differences between compared values. When a comparison word is used to contrast a personal attribute value with some standard (e.g. “Your score is better than average”), the comparison-suggested difference for the word may bias estimates or recall of personal attribute values. Three studies investigated how comparison-suggested differences determine the effect of social comparison on estimates or recall of personal attribute values. The first study demonstrated that estimates of attributes are biased towards (assimilation) or away from (contrast) a comparison standard depending on whether the difference between the compared attribute values exceeds or falls below the comparison-suggested difference. The second study showed that the comparison language selected by participants (through the difference suggested by the language) mediated the effect of standard similarity on attribute estimates following a social comparison. The third study demonstrated concurrent assimilation and contrast effects in recall of attribute values due to the size of the observed difference between the self and the standard for the attribute. Unlike in previous research on social comparison, assimilation and contrast patterns in these studies can be explained through a single process.
© 2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/New York
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- I'm “better” than you: Social comparison language suggests quantitative differences
- Low carbon diet: Reducing the complexities of climate change to human scale
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Articles in the same Issue
- Embodied semantic processing: The body-object interaction effect in a non-manual task
- I'm “better” than you: Social comparison language suggests quantitative differences
- Low carbon diet: Reducing the complexities of climate change to human scale
- Property generation reflects word association and situated simulation
- Communicating temporal information about autobiographical events
- When time is not space: The social and linguistic construction of time intervals and temporal event relations in an Amazonian culture