Journal
CURRENT DIRECTIONS IN PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE
Volume 24, Issue 1, Pages 38-44Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0963721414550709
Keywords
moral character; person perception; social cognition; warmth; sociability
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Understanding how people form impressions of others is a key goal of social cognition research. Past theories have posited that two fundamental dimensionswarmth and competenceunderlie impression formation. However, these models conflate morality with warmth and fail to capture the full role that moral character plays in impression formation. An emerging perspective separates moral character (or morality) from warmth on both theoretical and empirical grounds. When morality is pitted against warmth, morality is clearly a more important driver of impression formation, as revealed by correlational, experimental, and archival studies. Yet social warmth remains important and conveys distinct information that morality does not. Alongside competence, both factors matter not only for person perception but also for other aspects of social cognition, including group perception. Important unanswered questions remain regarding the perceived structure of moral character and the way it is appraised in everyday life.
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