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Verticality and Upward/Downward Comparisons

Subject Area Social Psychology, Industrial and Organisational Psychology
Term from 2015 to 2022
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 246329797
 
This project investigates the influence of spatial codes on comparative thinking, a causal role that has not yet been addressed in research on comparative thinking. In accordance with linguistic metaphors, societal display rules, and evidence on vertical space and value associations we predict that there is a multi-modal association between spatial top (bottom) positions and high (low) values. In Phase I we addressed basic comparison tasks in which participants had to compare the physical size of a target stimulus (e.g., a letter) with the size of a simultaneously presented standard stimulus. We manipulated the vertical position (top vs. bottom) of both target and standard orthogonally to each other. We found that upward comparisons (the standard is larger than the target) were facilitated when the standard was presented on a top position and the target on a bottom position (compared to the reversed vertical arrangement, while downward comparisons (the standard is smaller than the target) were facilitated when the standard was bottom and the target was top. The present phase generalizes this set-up to social comparisons of standards and targets being persons. In work package (WP) A we investigate social comparisons of morality and corruptness; in WP B we will focus on social-comparison based-emotions, such as pride, envy, and schadenfreude. Finally, in WP C we use vertical position as a means to gauge to what extent certain social emotions are susceptible to status-related information.
DFG Programme Research Units
Co-Investigator Professor Dr. Jan Crusius
 
 

Additional Information

Textvergrößerung und Kontrastanpassung