Anchoring and Adjustment During Social Inferences

被引:83
|
作者
Tamir, Diana I. [1 ]
Mitchell, Jason P. [1 ]
机构
[1] Harvard Univ, Dept Psychol, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
关键词
mentalizing; anchoring-and-adjustment; social cognition; simulation; self; OVERT HEAD MOVEMENTS; EGOCENTRIC BIAS; SELF; MIND; TRANSPARENCY; KNOWLEDGE; METAANALYSIS; PROJECTION; JUDGMENTS; OTHERS;
D O I
10.1037/a0028232
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Simulation theories of social cognition suggest that people use their own mental states to understand those of others-particularly similar others. However, perceivers cannot rely solely on self-knowledge to understand another person; they must also correct for differences between the self and others. Here we investigated serial adjustment as a mechanism for correction from self-knowledge anchors during social inferences. In 3 studies, participants judged the attitudes of a similar or dissimilar person and reported their own attitudes. For each item, we calculated the discrepancy between responses for the self and other. The adjustment process unfolds serially, so to the extent that individuals indeed anchor on self-knowledge and then adjust away, trials with a large amount of self-other discrepancy should be associated with longer response times, whereas small self-other discrepancy should correspond to shorter response times. Analyses consistently revealed this positive linear relationship between reaction time and self-other discrepancy, evidence of anchoring-and-adjustment, but only during judgments of similar targets. These results suggest that perceivers mentalize about similar others using the cognitive process of anchoring-and-adjustment.
引用
收藏
页码:151 / 162
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Ideological Differences in Anchoring and Adjustment During Social Inferences
    Stern, Chadly
    West, Tessa V.
    [J]. PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY BULLETIN, 2016, 42 (11) : 1466 - 1479
  • [2] Anchoring-and-Adjustment During Affect Inferences
    Yik, Michelle
    Wong, Kin Fai Ellick
    Zeng, Kevin J.
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2019, 9
  • [3] Anchoring on Self and Others During Social Inferences
    Willard, Daniel F. X.
    Markman, Arthur B.
    [J]. TOPICS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCE, 2017, 9 (03) : 819 - 841
  • [4] Egocentric Anchoring-and-Adjustment Underlies Social Inferences About Known Others Varying in Similarity and Familiarity
    Wang, Y. Andre
    Simpson, Austin J.
    Todd, Andrew R.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-GENERAL, 2023, 152 (04) : 1011 - 1029
  • [5] Neural correlates of anchoring-and-adjustment during mentalizing
    Tamir, Diana I.
    Mitchell, Jason P.
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2010, 107 (24) : 10827 - 10832
  • [6] Perceptual anchoring and adjustment
    Jain, Gaurav
    Nayakankuppam, Dhananjay
    Gaeth, Gary J.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL DECISION MAKING, 2021, 34 (04) : 581 - 592
  • [8] Anchoring and Adjustment in Relevance Estimation
    Shokouhi, Milad
    White, Ryen W.
    Yilmaz, Emine
    [J]. SIGIR 2015: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 38TH INTERNATIONAL ACM SIGIR CONFERENCE ON RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT IN INFORMATION RETRIEVAL, 2015, : 963 - 966
  • [9] The anchoring-and-adjustment heuristic
    Epley, N
    Gilovich, T
    [J]. PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2006, 17 (04) : 311 - 318
  • [10] ANCHORING AND ADJUSTMENT IN PROBABILISTIC INFERENCE IN AUDITING
    JOYCE, EJ
    BIDDLE, GC
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING RESEARCH, 1981, 19 (01) : 120 - 145