Self-monitoring without awareness: using mimicry as a nonconscious affiliation strategy.
This research sought to extend the current conceptualization of self-monitoring by examining whether self-monitoring motives and behaviors can operate outside of conscious awareness. Two studies examined nonconscious mimicry among high and low self-monitors in situations varying in affiliative cues. Participants interacted with a confederate who shook her foot (Study 1) or touched her face (Study 2). In both studies, high self-monitors were more likely to mimic the confederate's subtle gestures when they believed the confederate to be a peer (Study 1) or someone superior to them (Study 2). Low self-monitors mimicked to the same degree across conditions. Thus, when the situation contains affiliative cues, high self-monitors use mimicry as a nonconscious strategy to get along with their interaction partner.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Unconscious, Psychology
- Social Psychology
- Social Perception
- Self-Assessment
- Peer Group
- Motivation
- Male
- Interpersonal Relations
- Internal-External Control
- Imitative Behavior
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Unconscious, Psychology
- Social Psychology
- Social Perception
- Self-Assessment
- Peer Group
- Motivation
- Male
- Interpersonal Relations
- Internal-External Control
- Imitative Behavior