Two studies examined whether morality‐related information has a greater impact than sociability‐ or competence‐related information upon the spontaneous mimicry of an interaction partner. Participants were video recorded during an interaction with a confederate previously presented as moral vs. lacking morality, or sociable vs. lacking sociability (Study 1), or competent vs. lacking competence (Study 2). Two coders rated the extent to which participants imitated the gestures of the confederate, participants’ postural openness, and the general smoothness of the interaction. When the confederate lacked moral qualities, mimicry and postural openness were lower, and the interaction was less smooth than when the confederate was highly moral, unsociable or incompetent. Moreover, our findings showed that global impression is the key mediating mechanism driving such an effect. Indeed, knowing that another person behaved immorally resulted in a negative impression, which in turn hindered behavioral mimicry.

Menegatti, M., Moscatelli, S., Brambilla, M., Sacchi, S. (2020). The honest mirror: Morality as a moderator of spontaneous behavioral mimicry. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 50, 1394-1405 [10.1002/ejsp.2670].

The honest mirror: Morality as a moderator of spontaneous behavioral mimicry

Brambilla, M
Penultimo
;
Sacchi, S
Ultimo
2020

Abstract

Two studies examined whether morality‐related information has a greater impact than sociability‐ or competence‐related information upon the spontaneous mimicry of an interaction partner. Participants were video recorded during an interaction with a confederate previously presented as moral vs. lacking morality, or sociable vs. lacking sociability (Study 1), or competent vs. lacking competence (Study 2). Two coders rated the extent to which participants imitated the gestures of the confederate, participants’ postural openness, and the general smoothness of the interaction. When the confederate lacked moral qualities, mimicry and postural openness were lower, and the interaction was less smooth than when the confederate was highly moral, unsociable or incompetent. Moreover, our findings showed that global impression is the key mediating mechanism driving such an effect. Indeed, knowing that another person behaved immorally resulted in a negative impression, which in turn hindered behavioral mimicry.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Morality; Non verbal Behavior; Mimicry
English
2-mar-2020
2020
50
1394
1405
none
Menegatti, M., Moscatelli, S., Brambilla, M., Sacchi, S. (2020). The honest mirror: Morality as a moderator of spontaneous behavioral mimicry. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 50, 1394-1405 [10.1002/ejsp.2670].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/264387
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