2011
DOI: 10.1177/0146167211400097
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Self-Ambivalence and Resistance to Subtle Self-Change Attempts

Abstract: Recent research has demonstrated the malleability of self-views to subtle situational influence but has not uncovered features of the self-concept representation that make it susceptible to such change. Using research on attitude ambivalence as a foundation, the current article predicted that the self would be most likely to respond to a subtle change induction when the targeted self-beliefs were objectively ambivalent (e.g., possessed both positive and negative features). Using self-esteem conditioning (Exper… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…This is consistent with our status ambivalence hypothesis. It is also in line with previous work on age-related stereotypes which has shown that age-related stereotypes can be domain-specific, for example people may perceive negative age-related stereotypes in relation to health but positive stereotypes in relation to family [38] and with previous work on ambivalence in which individuals can hold simultaneously positive and negative beliefs about themselves or others [37]. Thus, social status is a multifaceted construct and it seems important to consider alternative social status dimensions.…”
Section: Discussion Studysupporting
confidence: 89%
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“…This is consistent with our status ambivalence hypothesis. It is also in line with previous work on age-related stereotypes which has shown that age-related stereotypes can be domain-specific, for example people may perceive negative age-related stereotypes in relation to health but positive stereotypes in relation to family [38] and with previous work on ambivalence in which individuals can hold simultaneously positive and negative beliefs about themselves or others [37]. Thus, social status is a multifaceted construct and it seems important to consider alternative social status dimensions.…”
Section: Discussion Studysupporting
confidence: 89%
“…For example, someone may believe that their friend is a good friend but a bad romantic partner. The concept of ambivalence has also been applied to self-perception such that individuals can simultaneously hold positive and negative representations of themselves [37]. As far as we are aware this has not been examined previously in relation to self-perceptions about social status.…”
Section: Self- and Other Perceptions Of Social Status: Status Ambivalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Attitudes that are low in ambivalence tend to exhibit strength consequences more than attitudes that are high in ambivalence (Conner & Armitage, 2008). For example, as already noted, ambivalent attitudes are less predictive of behavior (e.g., Conner et al, 2002;Lavine, 2001) and more susceptible to change (e.g., Armitage & Conner, 2000;Bell & Esses, 2002;DeMarree et al, 2011). A new question raised by the current research concerns the extent to which actual-desired attitude discrepancies are associated with strength consequences.…”
Section: Attitude Strengthmentioning
confidence: 68%
“…Ambivalence is a central construct in the literature on attitudes, and it has been the focus of a recent resurgence in research interest (e.g., Cavazza & Butera, 2008;Clark et al, 2008;Clarkson, Tormala, & Rucker, 2008;Cowley & Czellar, 2012;DeMarree, Morrison, Wheeler, & Petty, 2011;Hormes & Rozin, 2011;Petty, Tormala, Briñol, & Jarvis, 2006;Priester et al, 2007;Sawicki et al, 2013;Schneider et al, 2013;van Harreveld, Rutjens, et al, 2009;Ziegler, Schlett, Casel, & Diehl, 2012). Although the subjective experience of conflict is important because it often drives ambivalence outcomes (e.g., attitudebehavior correspondence, information seeking), there is a current gap in our understanding of the factors that contribute to this sense of conflict.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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