| Literature DB >> 23861201 |
Michael J Bernstein1, Heather M Claypool, Steven G Young, Taylor Tuscherer, Donald F Sacco, Christina M Brown.
Abstract
A debate exists concerning whether exclusion harms self-esteem. We hypothesized that social exclusion does harm self-esteem, but that this effect is evident only when self-presentational concerns to "appear fine" are minimal or people are unable to alter their report of self-esteem. In the first three studies, participants' explicit and implicit self-esteem were measured following an exclusion or comparison condition where self-presentational pressures were likely high. Because respondents can easily control their reports on explicit measures, but not on implicit ones, we hypothesized that exclusion would result in lower self-esteem only when implicit measures were used. Results confirmed this hypothesis. In the final study, self-presentational concerns were directly manipulated. When self-presentational concerns were high, only implicit self-esteem was lowered by exclusion. But, when such concerns were low, this impact on self-esteem was seen on implicit and explicit measures. Implications for the sociometer hypothesis and the recent self-esteem debate are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: ostracism; rejection; self-esteem; self-presentation; social exclusion
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23861201 DOI: 10.1177/0146167213495281
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pers Soc Psychol Bull ISSN: 0146-1672