Discrepancy and Disliking Do Not Induce Negative Opinion Shifts

Károly Takács, Andreas Flache, Michael Maes

OnderzoeksoutputAcademicpeer review

72 Citaten (Scopus)
341 Downloads (Pure)

Samenvatting

Both classical social psychological theories and recent formal models of opinion differentiation and bi-polarization assign a prominent role to negative social influence. Negative influence is defined as shifts away from the opinion of others and hypothesized to be induced by discrepancy with or disliking of the source of influence. There is strong empirical support for the presence of positive social influence (a shift towards the opinion of others), but evidence that large opinion differences or disliking could trigger negative shifts is mixed. We examine positive and negative influence with controlled exposure to opinions of other individuals in one experiment and with opinion exchange in another study. Results confirm that similarities induce attraction, but results do not support that discrepancy or disliking entails negative influence. Instead, our findings suggest a robust positive linear relationship between opinion distance and opinion shifts.

Originele taal-2English
Artikelnummere0157948
Aantal pagina's21
TijdschriftPLoS ONE
Volume11
Nummer van het tijdschrift6
DOI's
StatusPublished - 22-jun.-2016

Vingerafdruk

Duik in de onderzoeksthema's van 'Discrepancy and Disliking Do Not Induce Negative Opinion Shifts'. Samen vormen ze een unieke vingerafdruk.

Citeer dit