Rear negativity: Verbal messages coming from behind are perceived as more negative |
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Authors: | Natalia Frankowska Michal Parzuchowski Bogdan Wojciszke Michal Olszanowski Piotr Winkielman |
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Affiliation: | 1. SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Warsaw, Poland;2. Center of Research on Cognition and Behavior, SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Sopot, Poland |
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Abstract: | Many studies have explored the evaluative effects of vertical (up/down) or horizontal (left/right) spatial locations. However, little is known about the role of information that comes from the front and back. Basing our investigations on multiple theoretical considerations, we propose that spatial location of sounds is a cue for message valence, such that a message coming from behind is interpreted as more negative than a message presented in front of a listener. Here we show across a variety of manipulations and dependent measures that this effect occurs in the domain of social information. Our data are most compatible with theoretical accounts which propose that social information presented from behind is associated with uncertainty and lack of control, which is amplified in conditions of self-relevance. |
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Keywords: | alarm theory rear negativity sound spatial location |
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