Self‐esteem moderates preferences for accepting versus rejecting interaction partners |
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Authors: | Eric A. Rudich Constantine Sedikides Aiden P. Gregg |
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Affiliation: | 1. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA;2. University of Southampton, UK |
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Abstract: | Two experiments compared the social orientations of people with high and low self‐esteem (HSEs vs. LSEs). In Experiment 1, participants received positive or negative interpersonal feedback from an accepting or rejecting evaluator. HSEs chose to interact with a rejecting evaluator more often than LSEs did. In Experiment 2, participants received solely negative interpersonal feedback from an accepting or rejecting evaluator of high or low social status. This time, both HSEs and LSEs chose an accepting/high‐status evaluator over a rejecting/low‐status one, but only HSEs chose a rejecting/high‐status evaluator over an accepting/low‐status one. Implications are discussed. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
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