An examination of the processes by which construal level affects the implicit evaluation of goal relevant stimuli.
2017; American Psychological Association; Volume: 4; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1037/mot0000089
ISSN2333-8121
AutoresHeather Rees, Kentaro Fujita, Anna Han, Jeffrey W. Sherman, Asael Y. Sklar,
Tópico(s)Social and Intergroup Psychology
ResumoAuthor(s): Sherman, Jeffrey; Rees, Heather; Fujita, Kentaro; Han, H Anna; Sklar, Asael Y | Abstract: Previous research has found that construal level—how abstractly or concretely people represent events—can impact implicit evaluations. Abstract high-level construal (vs. concrete low-level construal) promotes evaluative responses consistent with global (strongly held, long-term) rather than local (short-term, situational) goals. It remains unclear by what cognitive process(es) this occurs. In this paper, we examine two possibilities. High-level construal might enhance the unintended influence of activated evaluative associations or facilitate the detection and implementation of intentional responses. To examine these possibilities, the current study applies a multinomial processing tree model to data from Fujita and Han (2009). Results suggest that high-level construal facilitates goal-consistent evaluations by increasing both the unintentional influence of activated goal-consistent positive associations and the intentional detection of and implementation of accurate responding to goal-relevant stimuli. These findings extend our understanding of how construal level promotes goal consistent evaluations.
Referência(s)