Changing, priming, and acting on values: Effects via motivational relations in a circular model
Changing, priming, and acting on values: Effects via motivational relations in a circular model
Circular models of values and goals suggest that some motivational aims are consistent with each other, some oppose each other, and others are orthogonal to each other. The present experiments tested this idea explicitly by examining how value confrontation and priming methods influence values and value-consistent behaviors throughout the entire value system. Experiment 1 revealed that change in 1 set of social values causes motivationally compatible values to increase in importance, whereas motivationally incompatible values decrease in importance and orthogonal values remain the same. Experiment 2 found that priming security values reduced the better-than-average effect, but priming stimulation values increased it. Similarly, Experiments 3 and 4 found that priming security values increased cleanliness and decreased curiosity behaviors, whereas priming self-direction values decreased cleanliness and increased curiosity behaviors. Experiment 5 found that priming achievement values increased success at puzzle completion and decreased helpfulness to an experimenter, whereas priming with benevolence values decreased success and increased helpfulness. These results highlight the importance of circular models describing motivational interconnections between values and personal goals.
699-715
Maio, Gregory R.
66e10dd8-9918-4544-b71c-cb6eb37166fa
Pakizeh, Ali
645c07a7-a905-4afa-9922-59aafdfced02
Cheung, Wing-Yee
7a3c3949-2468-466a-946b-f629f1ce07f4
Rees, Kerry J.
8cf32d3f-836c-4e56-b8d0-2e3fb3cd07fe
October 2009
Maio, Gregory R.
66e10dd8-9918-4544-b71c-cb6eb37166fa
Pakizeh, Ali
645c07a7-a905-4afa-9922-59aafdfced02
Cheung, Wing-Yee
7a3c3949-2468-466a-946b-f629f1ce07f4
Rees, Kerry J.
8cf32d3f-836c-4e56-b8d0-2e3fb3cd07fe
Maio, Gregory R., Pakizeh, Ali, Cheung, Wing-Yee and Rees, Kerry J.
(2009)
Changing, priming, and acting on values: Effects via motivational relations in a circular model.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 97 (4), .
(doi:10.1037/a0016420).
(PMID:19785487)
Abstract
Circular models of values and goals suggest that some motivational aims are consistent with each other, some oppose each other, and others are orthogonal to each other. The present experiments tested this idea explicitly by examining how value confrontation and priming methods influence values and value-consistent behaviors throughout the entire value system. Experiment 1 revealed that change in 1 set of social values causes motivationally compatible values to increase in importance, whereas motivationally incompatible values decrease in importance and orthogonal values remain the same. Experiment 2 found that priming security values reduced the better-than-average effect, but priming stimulation values increased it. Similarly, Experiments 3 and 4 found that priming security values increased cleanliness and decreased curiosity behaviors, whereas priming self-direction values decreased cleanliness and increased curiosity behaviors. Experiment 5 found that priming achievement values increased success at puzzle completion and decreased helpfulness to an experimenter, whereas priming with benevolence values decreased success and increased helpfulness. These results highlight the importance of circular models describing motivational interconnections between values and personal goals.
Text
Values_priming_JPSP.pdf
- Version of Record
More information
Published date: October 2009
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 169457
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/169457
ISSN: 0022-3514
PURE UUID: 920496bf-cecf-414d-9bc2-08b862cd0eac
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 15 Dec 2010 13:39
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:20
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Gregory R. Maio
Author:
Ali Pakizeh
Author:
Kerry J. Rees
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics