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Mimicry boosts social bias


Mimicry boosts social bias: unrealistic optimism in a health ...

ABSTRACT. Unrealistic optimism bias appears when a person perceives oneself – in comparison to peers – as less at risk from threats. This bias has been widely ...

Mimicry boosts social bias: unrealistic optimism in a health ...

Mimicry boosts social bias: unrealistic optimism in a health prevention case · Wojciech Kuleszaa Centre for Research on Social Relations, SWPS ...

Mimicry boosts social bias: Unrealistic optimism in a health ...

Mimicry boosts social bias: Unrealistic optimism in a health prevention case. · Citation · Abstract.

Empathy Modulates the Rewarding Effect of Mimicry - PMC - NCBI

Mimicry modulates reward value of social targets ... Greater gaze-bias towards the mimicking compared to the anti-mimicking face in experiment 1 ...

Mimicry reduces racial prejudice - ScienceDirect.com

Mimicking specific outgroup members, therefore, reduces implicit, and possibly explicit, bias against the outgroup more generally.

APA PsycNet Cited By Search Results

Kulesza, W., Dolinski, D., Muniak, P., & Rizulla, A. (2023). Mimicry boosts social bias: Unrealistic optimism in a health prevention case. Social Influence ...

Where is the love? The social aspects of mimicry - PMC

One striking characteristic of human social interactions is unconscious mimicry; people have a tendency to take over each other's posture, mannerisms and ...

Mimicking Others' Nonverbal Signals is Associated with Increased ...

Keywords: Social bias, nonverbal signals, children, mimicry, emotional mimicry, attitude ... not explicitly) the social benefits of mimicry. Adults show ...

Mimicry in social interaction: Benefits for mimickers, mimickees, and ...

Mimicry has benefits for people in social interactions. However, evidence regarding the consequences of mimicry is incomplete.

Mimicry: causes and consequences - ScienceDirect.com

People mimic others' facial and emotional expressions, behavioral movements, and verbal patterns. · Many social factors can facilitate or inhibit mimicry.

Mimicry in social interaction: Benefits for mimickers, mimickees, and ...

tendency to move a lot, the number of mimicry increases, but this is a side-effect of overall movement and could have biased our results. This mimicry coding ...

Mimicking Others' Nonverbal Signals Increases Attitude Contagion

The goal of the current research is to test whether children who mimic the biased nonverbal signals of others are more likely to adopt their social attitudes.

The Influence of Similarity and Mimicry on Decisions to Trust | Collabra

Here we ask how mimicry, a visible social cue, affects trust decisions alongside similarity. We used a “chat-room” style task to independently ...

How behavioral mimicry influences impression formation processes

Mimicry may play a functional role in social settings because it can bond people together (social glue hypothesis, Lakin et al., 2003). With that dominant view, ...

Mimicry in social interaction: Benefits for mimickers, mimickees, and ...

Mimicry has benefits for people in social interactions. However, evidence regarding the consequences of mimicry is incomplete.

Positive Mimicry design pattern

The main psychological principle behind Positive Mimicry is the inherent human need for social cohesion and acceptance. When we mimic or are mimicked by others, ...

Mimicry bias | Catalog of Bias

Mimicry bias. An innocent exposure may become suspicious if, rather than causing disease, it causes a benign disorder which resembles the disease.

The Influence of Mimicry on the Reduction of Infra-Humanization

The mechanism is reciprocal: the mimicker is more positively inclined towards the person mimicked (Chartrand and Bargh, 1999). Mimicry increases the sense of ...

[PDF] Being mimicked makes you a prosocial voter. | Semantic Scholar

Mimicry boosts social bias: unrealistic optimism in a health prevention case · Wojciech KuleszaD. DolińskiPaweł MuniakA. Rizulla. Psychology. Social influence.

The Effects of Shared Opinions on Nonverbal Mimicry - Sage Journals

People often mimic each other. Research has examined the positive social benefits of mimicry and factors that lead to increased mimicry.