Publication | Open Access
To think or to do: The impact of assessment and locomotion orientation on the Michelangelo phenomenon
60
Citations
19
References
2007
Year
Social PsychologyIndividual DifferencesEducationAction OrientationVisual ArtsSelf-monitoringPsychologySocial SciencesIntimate RelationshipPersonal RelationshipBehavioral SciencesArt HistoryEmbodied CognitionMotivationLocomotion OrientationIdeal Goal PursuitsApplied Social PsychologyMichelangelo PhenomenonScenographyVisual CulturePerception-action LoopProsocial BehaviorSocial BehaviorSpatial CognitionHuman MovementInterpersonal Attraction
This work examines how individual differences in assessment and locomotion shape goal pursuits in ongoing relationships. The Michelangelo phenomenon describes the role that close partners play in affirming versus disaffirming one another's pursuit of the ideal self. Using data from a longitudinal study of ideal goal pursuits among newly committed couples, we examined whether the action orientation that characterizes locomotion creates an optimal environment in which to give and receive affirmation, whereas the evaluative orientation that characterizes assessment creates a suboptimal environment for giving and receiving affirmation. Consistent with hypotheses, locomotion is positively associated with partner affirmation, movement toward the ideal self, and couple wellbeing, whereas parallel associations with assessment are negative. We also explore the behavioral mechanisms that may account for such associations.
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