Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
948171 | Journal of Experimental Social Psychology | 2011 | 4 Pages |
Social judgments take place in a concrete physical context. Recent research has explored how incidental physical experiences such as warmth influence social perception and behavior. However, we do not yet know if warmth affects self-evaluation. The present research seeks to examine this possibility by focusing on a central self-evaluative mechanism, namely social comparison. We hypothesized that physical warmth induces a general similarity focus that in turn fosters assimilative social comparison consequences and tested this in three studies. Study 1 established that warmth increases the perceived similarity of object pairs. In Study 2, participants compared themselves to a physically strong or weak standard. On warmer but not on colder days, they assimilated self-evaluations towards the target. Study 3 showed a similar pattern in a controlled laboratory setting. Together, these findings demonstrate that physical warmth shapes social comparison processes and as a consequence influences self-evaluation.
► We examine how physical warmth shapes social comparison and thereby self-evaluation. ► We show that temperature moderates the direction of social comparison consequences. ► Physical context features shape self-perception.