1974
DOI: 10.3758/bf03333439
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The set-size effect in personality impression formation is not an artifact

Abstract: The set-size effect in impression formation has been a highly reliable phenomenon when set size was varied as a within-S factor, but this effect has often been absent in between'S designs. Researchers have questioned the use of one or the other of these design techniq~es. and ha~e consequently labe~ed as artifactual either the presence or absence of set-size effects. ThIS IS a crucial matter for theories of impression formation. Studies are cited which have obtained the set-size eff~ct in a paired-co~paris,?ns… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…From an affect-based judgment perspective this result is particularly surprising given that in Experiment 1 each of the unintelligent behaviors was perceived to be evaluatively negative. The usual result is for judgments to become more extreme as behaviors are added to a consistent set (see Levin & Kaplan, 1974). However, repeated encounters with a target's unintelligent behaviors may have brought to mind an individual who has a mental impairment, such as Down's syndrome, which might alter reactions to the behavior set.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…From an affect-based judgment perspective this result is particularly surprising given that in Experiment 1 each of the unintelligent behaviors was perceived to be evaluatively negative. The usual result is for judgments to become more extreme as behaviors are added to a consistent set (see Levin & Kaplan, 1974). However, repeated encounters with a target's unintelligent behaviors may have brought to mind an individual who has a mental impairment, such as Down's syndrome, which might alter reactions to the behavior set.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…differently. These effects were explored within the impression formation literature (e.g., Anderson, 1974Anderson, , 1981Levin & Kaplan, 1974). For example, a set-size effect exists when a target person described as having four positive traits, each with a scale value of 4, is not given the same evaluation as when the same target is described as having only one of these traits (c.f.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A set-size effect refers to a situation in which numerically different sets of identically valenced stimuli are perceived differently (Anderson, 1974, 1981; Levin & Kaplan, 1974). These effects were explored within the impression formation literature (Levin & Kaplan, 1974).…”
Section: Set-size Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A set-size effect refers to a situation in which numerically different sets of identically valenced stimuli are perceived differently (Anderson, 1974, 1981; Levin & Kaplan, 1974). These effects were explored within the impression formation literature (Levin & Kaplan, 1974). The set-size interpretation was important to Anderson’s (1974, 1981, 2013) premise that within a single domain (e.g., impression formation and audiences), only one integration rule operated: averaging, summation, or multiplication.…”
Section: Set-size Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%