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Author(s)

Rick van Baaren

William Maddux

Tanya Chartrand

Chris de Bouter

Ad van Knippenberg

The present studies demonstrated the moderation of self-construal orientation on mimicry. Recent research has indicated that an interdependent self-construal is associated with assimilation of the other to the self whereas an independent self-construal is associated with minimizing the influence of others on the self (H. R. Markus & S. Kitayama, 1991; D. Stapel & W. Koomen, 2001). Therefore, the authors hypothesized that an interdependent self-construal would be associated with more mimicry than an independent self-construal. When self-construal orientations were experimentally primed. as in Studies 1 and 2, independent self-construals produced less nonconscious mimicry than interdependent self-construals. When self-construals were examined as cultural differences with either a chronically dominant independent (Americans) or interdependent (Japanese) construal of the self, these results were replicated.
Date Published: 2003
Citations: van Baaren, Rick, William Maddux, Tanya Chartrand, Chris de Bouter, Ad van Knippenberg. 2003. It Takes Two to Mimic: Behavioral Consequences of Self-Construals. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. (5)1093-1102.