4.4 Article

When the Wolf Wears Sheep's Clothing: Individual Differences in the Desire to be Liked Influence Nonconscious Behavioral Mimicry

Journal

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGICAL AND PERSONALITY SCIENCE
Volume 4, Issue 6, Pages 643-648

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1948550613476097

Keywords

mimicry; personality; narcissism; status; nonconscious behavior

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Current research into the elicitors of nonconscious behavioral mimicry focuses almost exclusively on prosocial motives. Alternatively, the present research investigates whether the self-centered desire to be liked by others also induces mimicry. We investigate this issue by measuring the mimicry behavior of narcissists-a dark personality'' that is uniquely characterized by a desire to be liked by rather than by genuine liking for people. Narcissists are particularly motivated to form social alliances with high-status others. Hence, it was hypothesized that narcissistic participants would show more mimicry of higher status others (compared to lower status others). Support for this hypothesis was provided by a mixed within- and between-subjects field experiment in which the mimicry behavior of participants identified as being above or below average in subclinical narcissism was observed in a scripted interaction with a higher and lower status other.

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