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      Perspective Taking as Egocentric Anchoring and Adjustment.

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          Abstract

          The authors propose that people adopt others' perspectives by serially adjusting from their own. As predicted, estimates of others' perceptions were consistent with one's own but differed in a manner consistent with serial adjustment (Study 1). Participants were slower to indicate that another's perception would be different from--rather than similar to--their own (Study 2). Egocentric biases increased under time pressure (Study 2) and decreased with accuracy incentives (Study 3). Egocentric biases also increased when participants were more inclined to accept plausible values encountered early in the adjustment process than when inclined to reject them (Study 4). Finally, adjustments tend to be insufficient, in part, because people stop adjusting once a plausible estimate is reached (Study 5). ((c) 2004 APA, all rights reserved)

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          Perspective-taking: decreasing stereotype expression, stereotype accessibility, and in-group favoritism.

          Using 3 experiments, the authors explored the role of perspective-taking in debiasing social thought. In the 1st 2 experiments, perspective-taking was contrasted with stereotype suppression as a possible strategy for achieving stereotype control. In Experiment 1, perspective-taking decreased stereotypic biases on both a conscious and a nonconscious task. In Experiment 2, perspective-taking led to both decreased stereotyping and increased overlap between representations of the self and representations of the elderly, suggesting activation and application of the self-concept in judgments of the elderly. In Experiment 3, perspective-taking reduced evidence of in-group bias in the minimal group paradigm by increasing evaluations of the out-group. The role of self-other overlap in producing prosocial outcomes and the separation of the conscious, explicit effects from the nonconscious, implicit effects of perspective-taking are discussed.
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            The correspondence bias.

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              Author and article information

              Journal
              Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
              Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
              American Psychological Association (APA)
              1939-1315
              0022-3514
              2004
              2004
              : 87
              : 3
              : 327-339
              Article
              10.1037/0022-3514.87.3.327
              15382983
              4687c9ae-a3de-46a1-9bb6-ebeb36ca8d9f
              © 2004
              History

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