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An Assimilative Effect of Stimulus Co-Occurrence on Evaluation Despite Contrasting Relational Information

  • Yahel Nudler*
  • , Tal Moran
  • , Yoav Bar Anan
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Open University of Israel
  • Ghent University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

The co-occurrence of a neutral stimulus with affective stimuli typically causes the neutral stimulus’s evaluation to shift toward the affective stimuli’s valence. Does that assimilative effect occur even when one knows the co-occurrence is due to an opposition relation between the stimuli (e.g., Batman stops crime)? Previous evidence tentatively supported that possibility, based on results compatible with an assimilative effect obscured by a larger contrast effect of the opposition relation (e.g., people like Batman less than expected, perhaps due to his co-occurrence with crime). We report three experiments (N = 802) in which participants preferred stimuli that stopped positive events over stimuli that stopped negative events—an assimilative effect of co-occurrence, unobscured by a contrast effect, despite comprehending the opposition relation and its evaluative implications. Our findings suggest that the assimilative effect of co-occurrence is potentially ubiquitous, not limited only to co-occurrence due to relations that suggest valence similarity.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)480-492
Number of pages13
JournalPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin
Volume51
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2025

Funding

FundersFunder number
Israel Science Foundation1684/21

    Keywords

    • associative learning
    • attitudes
    • dual-process theories
    • evaluative conditioning
    • propositional theory

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