Publication | Closed Access
Functional projection: How fundamental social motives can bias interpersonal perception.
473
Citations
64
References
2005
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingSocial PsychologyAffective NeuroscienceSocial InfluencePsychologySocial SciencesEmotional ResponseInterpersonal AttractionEmotion RegulationFunctional ProjectionBiasRelevant Emotional ExpressionsUnconscious BiasSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceArtsMotivationApplied Social PsychologySocial Identity TheorySexual BehaviorSocial CognitionMate-search GoalsSocial BiasSocial BehaviorAttribution TheoryMate-search GoalEmotionAggressionAdaptive Emotion
Results from 2 experimental studies suggest that self-protection and mate-search goals lead to the perception of functionally relevant emotional expressions in goal-relevant social targets. Activating a self-protection goal led participants to perceive greater anger in Black male faces (Study 1) and Arab faces (Study 2), both out-groups heuristically associated with physical threat. In Study 2, participants' level of implicit Arab-threat associations moderated this bias. Activating a mate-search goal led male, but not female, participants to perceive more sexual arousal in attractive opposite-sex targets (Study 1). Activating these goals did not influence perceptions of goal-irrelevant targets. Additionally, participants with chronic self-protective and mate-search goals exhibited similar biases. Findings are consistent with a functionalist, motivation-based account of interpersonal perception.
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