Selective attention to the self: Situational and dispositional determinants

Developed a paradigm to investigate the influence of success and failure experiences on subsequent selective attention to information about the self. 60 undergraduates were assigned to success, failure, or control experiences on an achievement task ostensibly testing intellectual ability. 30 Ss expe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of personality and social psychology 1973-07, Vol.27 (1), p.129-142
Hauptverfasser: Mischel, Walter, Ebbesen, Ebbe B, Zeiss, Antonette Raskoff
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container_end_page 142
container_issue 1
container_start_page 129
container_title Journal of personality and social psychology
container_volume 27
creator Mischel, Walter
Ebbesen, Ebbe B
Zeiss, Antonette Raskoff
description Developed a paradigm to investigate the influence of success and failure experiences on subsequent selective attention to information about the self. 60 undergraduates were assigned to success, failure, or control experiences on an achievement task ostensibly testing intellectual ability. 30 Ss expected further testing, and 30 did not. Immediately after the achievement task, Ss were given positive and negative personality information about themselves as well as information about the task. Ss could choose to attend, or not attend, to any of the information in any order for 10 min. Successful Ss attended more to their personality assets, and less to liabilities, than did Ss who failed or had a control experience. The latter 2 groups did not differ. These effects were strongest when there was no expectancy for further testing. The theoretical bases for the effects of positive experiences (e.g., success) on subsequent self-regulatory patterns are discussed. Main effects and interactions with individual differences on the Repression-Sensitization Scale indicate that sensitizers were more likely to attend to their liabilities and repressors to their assets. These effects of individual differences were strongest in control conditions and were nullified when treatment effects were powerful, in accord with theoretical expectations. (31 ref.)
doi_str_mv 10.1037/h0034490
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identifier ISSN: 0022-3514
ispartof Journal of personality and social psychology, 1973-07, Vol.27 (1), p.129-142
issn 0022-3514
1939-1315
language eng
recordid cdi_proquest_journals_614362408
source APA PsycARTICLES; Periodicals Index Online
subjects Achievement
Attention
Emotional Responses
Failure
Human
Self-Perception
title Selective attention to the self: Situational and dispositional determinants
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