Refine
Year of publication
- 2012 (11) (remove)
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (11) (remove)
Language
- English (11) (remove)
Keywords
- Africa (1)
- Afrika (1)
- Auditing (1)
- Ausbreitung (1)
- Benutzerverhalten (1)
- Bewertungskriterien (1)
- Bioassay (1)
- Bärlappe (1)
- Daphnia longispina (1)
- Daphnia longispina complex (1)
- Daphnia longispina-Komplex (1)
- Destiny (1)
- Distributed Environments (1)
- Einstellung (1)
- Einstellungen gegenüber bestimmten Filmeigenschaften (1)
- Ekel (1)
- Farnpflanzen (1)
- Ferns (1)
- Filmbewertung (1)
- Galerucinae (1)
- Genetische Variabilität (1)
- Genetischer Fingerabdruck (1)
- Hedonic (1)
- Hedonisch (1)
- IAT (1)
- Implicit Association Test (1)
- Justification (1)
- Konsistenz. Psychologie (1)
- Kriterium (1)
- Lycophytes (1)
- Mikrosatelliten-DNA (1)
- Monolepta (1)
- Movie evaluation criteria (1)
- Nutzererleben (1)
- Oriental region (1)
- Pharmakokinetik (1)
- Policy Language (1)
- Populationsgenetik (1)
- Pragmatic (1)
- Pragmatisch (1)
- Product choice (1)
- Produktbewertung (1)
- Produktentscheidung (1)
- Produktwahl (1)
- Provenance (1)
- Pteris (1)
- Rechtfertigung (1)
- Rechtfertigung <Philosophie> (1)
- Revision (1)
- Rezeptionsforschung (1)
- Satelliten-DNS (1)
- Selbstbeobachtung (1)
- Selbsteinschaetzung (1)
- Skalenkonstruktion (1)
- Skalenvalidierung (1)
- Systematik (1)
- Toxikologische Bewertung (1)
- User experience (1)
- Wildtiere (1)
- aquatic ecotoxicology (1)
- attitudes towards specific movie features (1)
- automatic behavioral cues (1)
- clonal diversity (1)
- disgust sensitivity (1)
- effect assessment (1)
- expansion (1)
- genotyping error (1)
- hazard prediction (1)
- implicit-explicit consistency (1)
- klonale Diversität (1)
- leaf beetles (1)
- microsatellite DNA (1)
- microsatellite analysis (1)
- population genetics (1)
- priority effects (1)
- priority-Effekte (1)
- scale construction (1)
- scale validation (1)
- systematics (1)
- toxicokinetics (1)
- wildlife management (1)
Institute
Based on dual process models of information processing, the present research addressed how explicit disgust sensitivity is re-adapted according to implicit disgust sensitivity via self-perception of automatic behavioral cues. Contrary to preceding studies (Hofmann, Gschwendner, & Schmitt, 2009) that concluded that there was a "blind spot" for self- but not for observer perception of automatic behavioral cues, in the present research, a re-adaption process was found for self-perceivers and observers. In Study 1 (N = 75), the predictive validity of an indirect disgust sensitivity measure was tested with a double-dissociation strategy. Study 2 (N = 117) reinvestigated the hypothesis that self-perception of automatic behavioral cues, predicted by an indirect disgust sensitivity measure, led to a re-adaption of explicit disgust sensitivity measures. Using a different approach from Hofmann et al. (2009), the self-perception procedure was modified by (a) feeding back the behavior several times while a small number of cues had to be rated for each feedback condition, (b) using disgust sensitivity as a domain with clearly unequivocal cues of automatic behavior (facial expression, body movements) and describing these cues unambiguously, and (c) using a specific explicit disgust sensitivity measure in addition to a general explicit disgust sensitivity measure. In Study 3 (N = 130), the findings of Study 2 were replicated and display rules and need for closure as moderator effects of predictive validity and cue utilization were additionally investigated. The moderator effects give hints that both displaying a disgusted facial expression and self-perception of one- own disgusted facial expression are subject to a self-serving bias, indicating that facial expression may not be an automatic behavior. Practical implications and implications for future research are discussed.