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Activating Transference Without Consciousness: Using Significant-Other Representations to Go Beyond What Is Subliminally Given
- Source :
- Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. Dec, 1999, Vol. 77 Issue 6, p1146, 17 p.
- Publication Year :
- 1999
-
Abstract
- Two studies examined nonconscious transference in social perception, defined as inferences about a new person based on a subliminally triggered significant-other representation (e.g., S. M. Andersen & S. W. Cole, 1990). In a nomothetic experimental paradigm involving idiographic stimuli, participants believed they were playing a computer game with another participant while exposed to subliminal descriptors from either their own, or a yoked participant's, significant other. In an impression-rating task, participants were more likely to infer that their 'game partner' had significant-other features not subliminally presented when the subliminal cues described their own, rather than a yoked participant's, significant other. Another control condition in Study 1 ruled out self-generation effects. A subliminality check confirmed that stimuli were nonconscious. Hence, subliminal activation of significant-other representations and nonconscious transference occur.
Details
- ISSN :
- 00223514
- Volume :
- 77
- Issue :
- 6
- Database :
- Gale General OneFile
- Journal :
- Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- edsgcl.62268495