Authors
Clayton R Critcher, David Dunning
Publication date
2015/1
Journal
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
Volume
41
Issue
1
Pages
3-18
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
We present an “affirmation as perspective” model of how self-affirmations alleviate threat and defensiveness. Self-threats dominate the working self-concept, leading to a constricted self disproportionately influenced by the threat. Self-affirmations expand the size of the working self-concept, offering a broader perspective in which the threat appears more narrow and self-worth realigns with broader dispositional self-views (Experiment 1). Self-affirmed participants, relative to those not affirmed, indicated that threatened self-aspects were less all-defining of the self (although just as important), and this broader perspective on the threat mediated self-affirmation’s reduction of defensiveness (Experiment 2). Finally, having participants complete a simple perspective exercise, which offered a broader perspective on the self without prompting affirmational thinking (Experiment 3a), reduced defensiveness in a manner …
Total citations
20152016201720182019202020212022202320242025513312217252424242512
Scholar articles
CR Critcher, D Dunning - Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 2015