Why schema-violations are sometimes preferable to schema-consistencies The role of interest and openness to experience
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| Publication date | 02-2017 |
| Journal | Journal of Research in Personality |
| Volume | Issue number | 66 |
| Pages (from-to) | 54-69 |
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| Abstract |
We investigated the appraisal processes and personality antecedents that regulate people’s attraction to schema-violations - targets and objects that disconfirm schema - and stereotype-based expectancies. In two studies a preference for schema-violations (vs. consistencies) correlated positively with openness to experience, and negatively with the need for structure. In the second study, schema-violations were seen as more surprising (by all individuals), decreasing intentions to approach schema-violations, but were also seen as more interesting (by those higher in openness to experience), increasing intentions to approach and accept schema-violations. This suggests that two opposing processes - appraisals of surprise and appraisals of interest - regulate reactions to schema-violations, and that these processes are bounded by individual differences in openness to experience.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrp.2016.12.005 |
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